77*2 
INDEX. 
stoats inoculated by foxes, 74—four cows destroyed by a doo- bitten by a 
fox, 74 —detailed account of a girl bitten by a fox, 74—post-mortem ap¬ 
pearances of in the fox, 75, 75—communicated by a fox to a horse, 76— 
beautiful account of the symptoms of in a mare, 77—the kind of rabies 
thus communicated, 78—the management and treatment of, 159—repe¬ 
tition of the French opinions of, 180—a singular case of the disappear¬ 
ance of its symptoms, 585—in cattle, 700—an unfortunate case of, 700 
R^le, account of the ditferent species of, 215 
Rayer, M., his excellent memoir on glanders, 378 
Read, Mr. R., on foot-rot, 37—on retention of urine in sheep, 160—on 
choking in cattle, 230—on the use and abuse of the flexible tulie, 230— 
on hemorrhage from the glans penis, 427—on phlebitis, 624—his account 
of the recent epidemic among horses, 702 —his opinion as to its primary 
source, 702—generated not universally but in particular situations, 703 
—the agent of infection, 703—the peculiar serous infiltration, 704— 
symptoms of, 704—treatment, 705—early bleeding, 705—no physic, 705 
—frequent infamous treatment of, 705 
Reasoning faculties, those of animals, 245, 374 
Rectum, a case of laceration of, 396—ditt j of stricture of, 580 
Red-water, caused by derangement of the digestive organs, 80, 322—the 
seasons and locality when most prevalent, 324—mode of treatment, 325 
Reid, Dr , at the Edinburgh veterinary dinner, 366, 372 
Reining, tight, a cause of roaring, 8, 50 
Relph, Mr., his singular case of apoplexy, 409—his cases of uterine dropsy, 
717 
Respirations, the number of in health, 116—the different divisions of, 116 
Reticulum, on hernia of the, 436 
Review : Gelle’s Cattle Pathology, 54, 297, 436, 604 
- Liebig’s Organic Chemistry, 752 
•- Low on the Breeds of the Domestic Animals, 216, 435, 566, 755 
•— - Martin’s Natural History of Quadrupeds, 291 
- Morton’s Toxicological Chart, 433 
-- Percivall’s Hippo-pathology, part l,voL 2, 431 
-Renault on Gangrene, 657 
Rham, the Rev. W. L., on the epidemic of cattle, 469 
Rheumatism in the synovial membrane of the sessamoid bones afier pleurisy, 
632 ‘ 
Rhinoceros, his brain not so large as that of the human being, 293 
Richardson, Mr., his case of serous apoplexy, 413—ditto of calculus, 582 
Richmond, His Grace the Duke of, on the epidemic of cattle, 468, 470 
Rigor, spasmodic, a case of in a horse, 719 
Roaring, the definition of, 1—the sound of, 1, 2—the cause of that sound, 2 
—when emitted, 2—the tests of, 3—tricks to conceal it, 4—is it unsound¬ 
ness? 4—mares seldom roarers, 5—in man, 5—the pathology of, 5—from 
thickening of the membrane, 6—ulceration of ditto, 6—metastasis, 6— 
bands of coagulable lymph, 6—ossification of the larynx, 7—mostly in 
harness horses, 7—from tight reining, 8—from wasting of the muscles of the 
larynx, 8—malformation of the larynx a cause of it, 45—mechanical ob¬ 
struction, ditto, 45—enlargement of the turbinated bones the cause of, 45 
—pulmonary compression, ditto, 46—nervous influence, ditto, 46—spasm 
of the glottis, ditto, 47—hereditary, 47, 82—the treatment of, 48—auscul¬ 
tation in, 49—inflammation, the consequence of, 49—excision of the cross 
bands supposed to be a cure, 50—reining' in, the treatment of roaring 
from, 50—the French treatment of, 51—produced by hepatization of tlie 
lungs, 46—proper inquiries concerning, 48—Clater’s curious medicine 
for, 49—has it any (ronnexi(m with turning out, 61—supposed from some 
