Diseases of the Nervous System. 2590 
e. Alterations in the digestive organs. 1. Injuries to the 
tongue in one rabid dog. 2. Foreign bodies in the mouth 
and throat of I rabid and 1 suspected, 3. Stomach empty 
in 19 rabid and 1 suspected. 4. Foreign matter in the 
stomach—hair, wood, straw, grass, leaves, soil, cherry- 
stones (and in one case a living horse-fly attached to the 
mucous membrane)—in 56 rabid and 21 suspected. 5. 
Foreign matter besides hair in intestines in 6 rabid and 3 
suspected. 6. Blood in the stomach in 2 rabid. 7. Injec- 
tion of the serous membrane of the stomach only in 43 
rabid and 2 suspected. 8. Injection of serous membrane 
of the stomach and intestines in 3 rabid and 3 suspected. 
g. Pallor of the gastric mucous membrane in 1 rabid. 
10. General redness of the same in 6 rabid. 11. Patchy 
redness of the samein 2 rabid. 12. Hemorrhagic erosions 
and ulcersin the same in gorabid. 13. Marked yellowness 
of the intestinal mucous membrane and contents of same, 
in4 rabid. 14. General redness, with tumefaction of the 
intestinal mucous membrane and tape-worm, in 58 rabid 
and 17 suspected. 15. Patchy redness of the mucous 
membrane of the small intestines, particularily involving 
Peyer’s patches,in 27 rabid and 9 suspected. 16. Diver- 
ticular formations in 1 rabid animal. 
jf. Alterations in the urinary and generative organs. 
1. Nephritis in one rabid and I suspected ; 2. Cystitis and 
nephritis in 1 rabid ; 3. Pregnancy, about three weeks, in a 
rabid bitch. 
g. Alterations in the locomotory apparatus probably due 
to injury to the head, were discovered in 3 rabid and 13 
suspected dogs. 
In the “Bericht fiber den Veteriniirwesen in Sachsen,” 
for 1874, Professor Siedamgrotzky has a paper on 
the pathological anatomy of rabies* He remarks 
that the peculiar expression of the rabid dog’s physio- 
* From the “ Veterinary Journal,” October, 1876. 
