VETERINARY MEDICAL SOCIETY. 
707 
the disease existing during a healthy state of the constitution. 
What system continues in health, the vascular or the muscular? 
What tissue or part takes on diseased action, while the others re¬ 
main unaffected ? Until he heard a better opinion, he thought 
Mr. Coleman’s as good as any. 
Mr. Goodwin observed, that a small French synoptical work on 
glanders stated the disease to consist at first in minute miliary 
tubercles on the Schneiderian membrane. 
Mr. ]\Jailor said that Mr. Dick believed that it commenced in 
the cellular membrane. If an animal attacked with glanders were 
pressed on the head, or turned in the stall, he would evince pain. 
He had seen two cases, in one of which inflammation of the 
Schneiderian membrane had gone on to suppuration. When this 
horse was pressed on the head or back, he shrunk under the 
pressure. The frontal sinus exhibited no disease. 
Mr. Field remarked that this, in some measure, coincided with 
the theory of M. Dupuy. 
Mr. Turner inquired whether in syphilis, so far established that 
secondary symptoms appeared, the blood was supposed to be 
impregnated with the virus. 
Mr. Millington did not imagine that it was, although these 
were not analogous cases, because in syphilis the lungs were not 
affected. 
Mr. Goodwin said that John Hunter believed in this vitiation 
of the blood ; but he imagined that his opinions were founded on 
these experiments of Mr. Coleman’s. < 
ERRATA. 
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Ki- TO CORRESPONDENTS IN OUR NEXT. 
