SPIRILLA RESEMBLING CHOLERA. 335 medium rich in peptone produces the same rose color observed in cholera cultivations. The organism is pathogenic for animals, but not for man. Pfeiffer has shown that chickens, pigeons, and guinea-pigs are highly susceptible animals. The birds when inoculated under the skin generally die—pigeons always. W. Rindfleish has pointed out that this positive fatal outcome of the introduction of the spirillum into pigeons makes it a valuable diagnostic point for the differentiation of this spirillum from that of cholera. According to his 'researches, the simple subcutaneous in- jection of the most virulent cholera cultures is never fatal to pigeons. The birds only die when the injections are made into the muscles in such.a manner that the muscular tissue is injured and becomes a locus minoris resistentitz. When guinea-pigs are treated according to the method of Koch for the inoculation of cholera, the temperature of the animal rises for a short time,, then abruptly falls to 33° C. or less. Death follows in twenty to twenty-four hours. A distinct inflammation of the intestine, with exudate and numerous spirilla, may be found. The spirilla can also be found in the heart's blood and in the organs of such guinea-pigs. When the bacilli are introduced by subcutaneous inoculation, the autopsy shows a bloody edema and a superficial necrosis of the tissues. In the blood and all the organs of pigeons and young chickens the organisms can be found in such large num- bers that Pfeiffer has suggested the term " vibrionensep- ticsemie" for the condition. In the intestines very few alterations are noticeable, and very few spirilla can be found. Gamaleia has shown that pigeons and guinea-pigs can be made immune by inoculating them with cultures ster- ilized for a time at a temperature of 100° C. Mice and rabbits are immune except to very large doses. Spirillum Berolinensis.—This organism (Fig. 91), which was discovered by Neisser in the summer of 1893,