TURER CUL OSIS. 22$ consist in nodes, nodules, or collections of agminated nodules, called tubercles, scattered irregularly through the tissues, which are devitalized or disorganized by their presence. When tubercle bacilli are introduced beneath the skin of a guinea-pig, the animal shows no sign of disease for a week or two; it then begins to lose appetite and gradually to diminish in flesh and weight. Examination at this time will show a nodule at the point of injection and enlargement of the neighboring lymphatic glands. The atrophy increases, the animal shows a febrile reaction, and at the end of a varying period of time, averaging about twelve weeks, dies. Post-mortem ex- amination shows a cluster of tubercles at the point of inoculation, enlargement of lymphatic glands both near and remote from the primary lesion (due to the presence of tubercles), and a widespread invasion of the lungs, liver, kidneys, peritoneum, and other organs and tissues, with tuberculous tissue in a more or less advanced con- dition of necrosis. Sometimes there are no tubercles discoverable at the point of inoculation. There is no regularity iu the distribution of the disease. Tubercle bacilli are demonstrable in immense numbers in all the diseased tissues. The disease as seen in the guinea-pig is more extended than in other animals because of its greater susceptibility, and the death of the animal is more rapid than in other species for the same reason. In rabbits the lesion runs a longer course with similar lesions. In bovines and sheep the infection is generally first seen in, and is principally confined to, the alimentary appa- ratus and the associated organs, though pulmonary dis- ease also occurs. In man the disease is chiefly pulmonary, though gastro-intestinal and general miliary forms are also common. The development of the lesions in whatever tissue or animal always depends upon the distribution of the bacilli by the lymph or the blood, and is first inflam- matory, then degenerative, in type. The experiments of Koch, Pruclden and Hodeuphyl, and others have shown that when dead tubercle bacilli 15