312 BACTERIOLOGY. 



By microscopic examination they are found to repre- 

 sent places where the liver cells have undergone necrosis 

 accompanied with emigration of leucocytes, and the 

 cells about them are in a condition of fatty degeneration. 



In sections of the liver, masses of the bacilli may be 

 discovered in and about the necrotic foci just described. 



At these autopsies the colon bacillus is not found 

 generally distributed through the body, but is only to 

 be detected in the bile, liver, and occasionally in the 

 spleen.^ 



1 Consult paper by Blachstein on this subject. Johns Hopkins Hospital 

 Bulletin, July, 1891. 



