Po Tate He YUN pa: wait de Fe ab TMT Mech Penh a Wit Cr eutrt tee auiseati a, fii a i niin tf We gga slalvont ails igs stati a tes Sieh i! ve SHbin 4 ie ONS RU a He halted raat 9 \ Vs hei nara Dus A Ne i fal we byob yin ne i eI stared (ee id flee. Tie Bodie rt oie meeny sae eek ines of ¥ y ry Fh es os Pate he As ‘ i : nF a neat ay ; Aa, steer Gok fie cated ae 9 ke of tajglit anh ud OE elroy a ber ‘ nes PSS basher etiben ta tsa ety meltay TA ah it aches ep mite t Mia Ai ee Cea Deed sai haces neetniie haa ianueee git Ay i Ratt) / QR blo C44 \e4] CORNELL UNIVERSITY THE Hlower Veterinary Cibrary FOUNDED BY ROSWELL P. FLOWER for the use of the N. Y. STATE VETERINARY COLLEGE 1897 Cc HU, Lib QR 46.094 1897 A text-book of bacteriology, includ iii DATE DUE GAYLORD PRINTEDINU.S.A. Cornell University Library The original of this book is in the Cornell University Library. There are no known copyright restrictions in the United States on the use of the text. http://www.archive.org/details/cu31924000246714 A TEXT-BOOK BACTERIOLOG INCLUDING THE ETIOLOGY AND PREVENTION OF INFECTIVE DISHASES AND A SHORT ACCOUNT OF YEASTS AND MOULDS, H#MATOZOA, AND PSOROSPERMS BY EDGAR M. GROOKSHANK, M.B. PROFESSOR OF COMPARATIVE PATHOLOGY AND BACTERIOLOGY, AND FELLOW OF KING'S COLLEGE, LONDON FOURTH EDITION RECONSTRUCTED, REVISED AND GREATLY ENLARGED PHILADELPHIA W. B. SAUNDERS 925 WALNUT STREET 1897 & To SIR JOSEPH LISTER, BART. MB, P.RS., WHO HAS CREATED A NEW EPOCH IN MEDICINE AND SURGERY, BY APPLYING A KNOWLEDGE OF ‘MICRO-ORGANISMS TO THE TREATMENT OF DISEASE, This ork is, with permission, Dedicated BY THE AUTHOR AS A TOKEN OF ADMIRATION AND RESPECT PREFACE TO THE FOURTH EDITION. Turs book, though nominally a fourth edition, is practically speaking a new work. The progress of Bacteriology has been very rapid, and many new investigations have been made in connection with the etiology, prevention and treatment of communicable diseases. It has been necessary to reconstruct, enlarge and thoroughly revise the text of the third edition, and I have added twenty-six chapters. The most. important researches conducted in bacteriological laboratories are those relating to the contagia. In many diseases of man and animals it has not been possible to identify the contagium with a bacterium, or indeed with any micro-organism ; but when the virus is chemically examined, or investigated with a view to protective inoculation, or utilised for experiments in serum-therapeutics, such researches are within the province of the bacteriologist. The recognition of the fact that in so many diseases the nature of the contagium has not yet been determined will have the effect of encouraging continued activity in this important field of scientific investigation. I hope that this work will continue to be of use as a text- book for the bacteriological laboratory, and that the chapters on the etiology and prevention of the communicable diseases viii PREFACE TO THE FOURTH EDITION. of man and-animals will be not only of scientific interest, but of practical value to Medical Officers of Health and Veterinary Inspectors. I have divided the book into three parts. Part I. is mainly technical, and includes the most recent methods employed in studying bacteria and investigating the etiology of disease. Part II. deals with infective diseases and the bacteria associated with them. Any clinical or pathological evidence which may help to throw light on the nature and origin of the contagia is taken into account. The most effectual measures for stamping out these diseases are referred to, as they are intimately connected with a knowledge of the life-history of micro-organisms. Part III. contains descriptions of about five hundred bacteria. Many are of no practical importance and of very little scientific interest, but a text-book for the laboratory cannot be con- sidered complete unless an account is given of all bacteria which have been more or less completely investigated. I have endeavoured to refer to the original descriptions and to verify them by comparison with actual cultivations, but in a very great number of instances this has been quite impossible, and I desire to acknowledge the assistance I have received from the works of several authors, especially those of Fliigge, Frankel, Hisenberg, Baumgarten, Frankland, Sternberg, Lehmann and Neumann. I have rearranged the bibliography according to the chapters, and the names of authors are given in alphabetical order. With the aid of the current numbers of the Annales de UInstitut Pasteur, the Zeitschrift fir Hygiene, the Centralblatt fiir Bakteriologie und Parasitenkunde, and the Journal of Comparative Pathology and Bacteriology, it is possible to become acquainted with the most recent litera- ture of the subject. Many of the coloured plates illustrating the last edition have not been reproduced. Those substituted for them have been drawn from my own preparations, and most of them PREFACE TO THE FOURTH EDITION. 1x have already appeared in my Reports to the Board of Agriculture and in other publications. One hundred and thirty-three woodcuts and photoraphe have been added in the text, and I have reverted to the plan which J adopted in the second edition, of having many of them printed in .colours. I take this opportunity of thanking Professor Frankel for kindly permitting me to reproduce some of the photographs in his excellent Atlas. I am particularly indebted to Professor Hamilton for the use of clich’s of figures in his classical treatise on Pathology, and to the New Sydenham Society for several from the’ English translation of Professor Fliigge’s well- known work on micro-organisms. To my Demonstrator, Dr. George Newman, D.P.H., I am indebted for much assistance in correcting the proof-sheets, and for the preparation of an index. EDGAR M. CROOKSHANK. SAInrt Hint, HAST GRINSTEAD, SUSSEX, August 1st, 1896. P.S.—Since this work was finally passed for press the con- clusions of the Royal Vaccination Commissioners have been published. I have at the last moment added extracts in the form of a supplementary Appendix. E. M. C. September 18th, 1896. CONTENTS. PART 2. THEORETICAL AND TECHNICAL. CHAPTER I. HISTORICAL INTRODUCTION CHAPTER II. MORPHOLOGY AND PHYSIOLOGY OF BACTERIA CHAPTER JTL EFFECT OF ANTISEPTICS AND DISINFECTANTS ON BACTERIA CHAPTER IV. CHEMICAL PRODUCTS OF BACTERIA CHAPTER V. IMMUNITY . CHAPTER VI. ANTITOXINS AND SERUM THERAPY CHAPTER VII. THE BACTERIOLOGICAL MICROSCOPE CHAPTER VIII. MICROSCOPICAL EXAMINATION OF BACTERIA CHAPTER IX. PREPARATION OF NUTRIENT MEDIA AND METHODS OF CULTIVA- TION . PAGE 11 30 39 49 65 83 99 Xi CONTENTS. CHAPTER X. EXPERIMENTS UPON THE LIVING ANIMAL CHAPTER XI. EXAMINATION OF AIR, SOIL, AND WATER CHAPTER XII. PHOTOGRAPHY OF BACTERIA PART 11. ETIOLOGY AND PREVENTION OF INFECTIVE DISEASES, CHAPTER XIII. SUPPURATION, PYAMIA, SEPTICA:MIA, ERYSIPELAS CHAPTER XIV. ANTHRAX . CHAPTER XV. QUARTER-EVIL.—MALIGNANT (EDEMA.—RAG-PICKERS’ SEPTI- CASMIA.—SEPTICZMIA OF GUINEA-PIGS.—SEPTICEMIA OF MICE . CHAPTER XVI. SEPTICZMIA OF BUFFALOES.---SEPTIC PLEURO-PNEUMONIA OF CALVES.—SWINE FEVER.—SEPTICEMIA OF DEER.—SEPTI- CMIA OF RABBITS.—FOWL CHOLERA.—FOWL ENTERITIS. — DUCK CHOLERA.—GROUSE DISEASE CHAPTER XVII. PNEUMONIA.—INFECTIOUS PLEURO-PNEUMONIA OF CATTLE.— INFLUENZA CHAPTER XVIII. ORIENTAL PLAGUE.—RELAPSING FEVER.—TYPHUS FEVER,— YELLOW FEVER PAGE . 184 140 . 150 173 . 191 . 217 . 226 . 233 . 250 CONTENTS. xiii PAGE CHAPTER XIX. SCARLET FEVER.—MEASLES ‘ 4 : ' . 261 CHAPTER XX. SMALL-POX.—CATTLE PLAGUE. 284 CHAPTER XXI. SHEEP-POX.—FOOT-AND-MOUTH DISEASE : 297 CHAPTER XXII. HORSE-POX.—COW-POX z : ; 3 303 CHAPTER XXIII. DIPHTHERIA P : : ‘ 330 CHAPTER XXIV. TYPHOID FEVER. . 3 340 CHAPTER XXV. SWINE FEVER. : . ‘ : . 347 CHAPTER XXVI. SWINE MEASLES.—DISTEMPER IN DOGS.—EPIDEMIC DISEASE OF FERRETS.—EPIDEMIC DISEASE OF MICE . , . 855 CHAPTER XXVII. ASIATIC CHOLERA.—CHOLERA NOSTRAS.—CHOLERAIC DIARRH@A FROM MEAT POISONING.— DYSENTERY.—CHOLERAIC DIAR- RHGA IN FOWLS ; : ; ; : . 360 CHAPTER XXVIII. TUBERCULOSIS : ; : ; : . 375 CHAPTER XXIX. LEPROSY.—SYPHILIS.—RHINOSCLEROMA.—TRACHOMA 406 CHAPTER XXX. ACTINOMYCOSIS.—MADURA DISEASE é 413 CHAPTER XXXI. GLANDERS . j : : : 451 xiv CONTENTS. PAGE CHAPTER XXXII. TETANUS.—RABIES.— LOUPING-ILL . : . . 457 CHAPTER XXXIII. FOOT-ROT . “ . = . 2 : : ‘ . 464 CHAPTER XXXIV. FOUL-BROOD.——INFECTIOUS DISEASE OF BEES IN ITALY.— PEBRINE.—FLACHERIE,—INFECTIOUS DISEASE> OF CATER- PILLARS. : ; ‘ i i : : . 469 PARE Ji. SYSTEMATIC AND DESCRIPTIVE. CHAPTER XXXvV. CLASSIFICATION AND DESCRIPTION OF SPECIES. : . 475 APPENDICES. APPENDIX I. YEASTS AND MOULDS : . : . : . . 577 APPENDIX II. HEMATOZOA IN MAN, BIRDS, AND TURTLES.—H#MATOZOA IN EQUINES, CAMELS: AND FISH.—H#MATOZOA IN FROGS . 589 APPENDIX III. PSOROSPERMS OR COCCIDIA.—AMCBA COLI . : . 609 APPENDIX IV. APPARATUS, MATERIAL AND REAGENTS EMPLOYED IN A BAC- TERIOLOGICAL LABORATORY . ; : : . 612 APPENDIX YV. BIBLIOGRAPHY . : 3 . 639 SUPPLEMENTARY APPENDIX. EXTRACTS FROM THE FINAL REPORT OF THE ROYAL VACCINA- TION COMMISSION , : ; : ; : . 667 Dore NES LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS. WOOD ENGRAVINGS AND PHOTOGRAPHS. PAGE . Ascococcus Billrothii, x 65 (Cohn) ; 14 . Spirocheta from Sewage Water, x 1200 (E.M. 0. ) 15 . Flagella (Koch, Brefeld, Warming, Zopf) 16 . Bacillus Megatherium (De Bary) . _ 17 . Clostridium Butyricum, x 1020 (Prazmowski) . 18 . Leuconostoc: Mesenteroides; Cocci-chains with Arthroupores (van Tieghem and Cienkowski) ‘ 19 . Spore-bearing Threads of Bacillus Anthracis, double: stained with Fuchsine and Methylene Blue, x 1200 (H.M.C.) 20 . Bacilli of Tubercle in Sputum, x 2500 (E.M.C.) : 21 . Comma, Bacilli in Sewage Water, stained with Gentian Violet, x 1200 (E.M.C.) 22 . Vibrios in Water eontaminated with Sewage, x 1200 a M.C.) 22 . Refraction of Light (Carpenter) » 66 . Spherical Aberration (Carpenter) 87 . Combination of Lenses in Abbé’s Homogeneous Immersion (Car- penter) . ' 67 . Chromatic Aberration (Carpenter) 68 . Objective with Collar Correction (Zeiss) 3 69 . Microscope—English Model (Swift) 71 . Removable Mechanical Stage (Swift) 72 . Microscope—Continental Model (Zeiss) . 73 . Iris Diaphragm (Zeiss) , 74 . Abbé’s Condenser (Zeiss) . 15 . Microscope Lamp (Baker) . 6 . Large Microscope Lamp (Swift) . 5 GT . Arrangement of Powell and Lealand’s Microscope in working ditectly on the Edge of the Flame, with Stand for Micrometer Eye-piece to secure Steadiness and Accuracy of! ie aa (Carpenter after Nelson) . ‘ F 79 . Ramsden Micrometer Eye- -piece (Switt) : 80 . Micrometer Eye-piece (Zeiss) 81 . Inoculating Needles (E.M.C.) . 84 . Freezing Microtome (Swift) 94 . Microtome (Jung) . 95 . Wire-cage for Test-tubes (Muencke) ‘ 100 . Hot-air Steriliser (E.M.C.) . 101 Xvi . LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS, FIG. PAGE 31. Hot-water Filtering Apparatus (Muencke) 102 32. Method of making a Folded Filter (E.M.C.) 103 33, Steam Steriliser (Baird and Tatlock) . 103 34. Incubator (Muencke) 104 35. Method of Inoculating a Test-tube containing Sterile Nutrient J elly (E.M.C.) : ; . 105 36. Levelling Apparatus (E.M.C) . 107 37. Iron box for Glass Plates (Muencke) 108 38. Method of Inoculating Test-tubes in the Preparation of Plate-cultiva- tions (E.M.C.) . 108 39. Damp-chamber containing Plate- cultivations (Bl M.C) 110 40. Pasteur’s Large Incubator (Becker) 111 41. Petri’s Dish (Becker) : 112 42. Glass Benches and Slides (Becker) 112 43, Koch’s Serum Steriliser (Muencke) 3 114 44. Hueppe’s Serum Inspissator (Baird and Tatlock) 115 45. Box for Sterilising Instruments (Becker) ‘ 116 46. Damp Chamber for Potato-cultivations (E.M.C.) 117 47. Apparatus for Sterilisation by Steam under pressure (Baird nd Tatlock) F E : 119 48. Drop Cultivation (Bliigge) é 121 49. Simple Method of forming a Moist Cell (Schifer) : 122 50. Warm Stage (Schafer) . E 123 51. Warm Stage shown in eciatien: (Schafer) 123 52. Warming Apparatus in Operation (Israel) 124 53. Section of Warming Apparatus and Drup-culture Slide (Israel) 125 54. Israel’s Warming Apparatus 125 55. Gas Chamber in use with Apparatus tor generating Carbonic Acid (Schafer) : 126 56. Gas Chamber (Schafer) 126 57. Moist Cell adapted for ‘Teen antsetou of Rlsetiietty (Schafer) . 127 58. Apparatus arranged for Transmitting Electricity (Schifer) 127 59. Slide with Gold-leaf Electrodes (Schifer) p 128 60. Lister’s Flask (Becker) . 128 61, Sternberg’s Bulb (Becker) 128 62, Aitken’s Tube (Becker) 129 63. Miquel’s Bulb (Becker) . 129 64. Pasteur’s Flask (Baird and Tatlock) 130 65. Pasteur’s Double Tube (Baird and Tatlock) 130 66. Frankel’s Anaerobic Tube-culture (Frankland) ‘ 131 67. Anaerobic Culture Tube (Liborius) 132 68. Apparatus for Anaerobic Cultures (Roscoe and Lunt) é 133 69. Koch’s Syringe (Baird and Tatlock) 135 70. Syringe with Asbestos Plug (Baird and Tatlock) 135 71. Hesse’s Apparatus (Muencke) . 142 72. Sedgwick and Tucker’s Tube (Baird and Tatlock) 143 73, Pouchet’s Aeroscope (Hamilton) . 143 74. Apparatus for Estimating the number -{ Colonies in a Plate-cultiva- tion (Muencke) 146 75. Esmarch’s Roll-culture (Frankland) 147 76. Apparatus for Counting Colonies in a Roll-culture (Becker) 148 ‘ . Horizontal Micro-photographic Apparatus (Swift) 156 115. 116. LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS, . Reversible Micro-photographic Apparatus (E.M.C.) , q . Reversible Micro-photographic: Apparatus arranged in the Vertical Position (E.M.C.) : . . . Large Micro-photographic Apraracus (Swift) . . Photograph of an Impression Preparation (E.M.C.) : . Photograph of a Cultivation of Bacillus anthracis (E.M.C.) . . Suppuration of Subcutaneous Tissue (Cornil and Ranvier) . Pus with Staphylococci, x 800 (Fliigge) . Subcutaneous Tissue of a Rabbit forty-eight hours sitter an Injection of Staphylococci, x 950 (Baumgarten) . Ulcerative Endocarditis: Section of Cardiac ‘Nidadlo, x 700 Koch) . Pure-cultures of Streptococcus Pyogenes (E.M.C.) . . Section of Skin in Erysipelas (Cornil and Ranvier) 2 . Streptococcus Pyogenes ke ni, Pure-cultures on Nutelent Gela- tine (E.M.C.) . . Streptococcus Pyogenes Bovis ; “Dies ealtanes: on Notvient Gelatine, (B.M.C.) . : 4 ? : |. Gonococcus, x 800 (Gunn) ‘ . Bacillus Anthracis, x 1200. Blood Corpiuctas and Bacilli unstained; from an Inoculated Mouse (Frankel and Pfeiffer) . Pure-cultivation of Bacillus anthracis in Nutrient Gelatine (E. M.C. ) Colonies of Bacillus anthracis, x 86 (Fltgge) . Impression-preparation of a Colony, x 70 ee . Margin of a Colony, x 250 (E.M.C.) . Filaments with Oval and Irregular Elements, x 800 (B. M.C. ) . Spores of Bacillus anthracis stained with Gentian Violet, x 1500 (E.M.C.) . Anthrax in Swine (E.M. C) . Anthrax in Swine (E.M.C.) " . Bacilli of Quarter-evil, x 1000 CFviinkeel and Pfeiffer) . Pure-culture of Bacilli of Quarter-evil in Grape-sugar Caletine (Frinkel and Pfeiffer) . . Bacilli of Malignant &dema, x "950 {Batimgarton . Pure-culture of Bacillus of Malignant (idema in Grape ee Gelatine (Frankel and Pfeiffer) . Bacilli of Malignant (Edema, x 1000 (Finkel and Pfeiffer) . Pure-cultivation of the Bacillus of Septiceemia of Mice in Nutrient Gelatine (E.M.C.) . Bacterium of Rabbit Scimenats Blood of Spare, x 700 (oats . Bacterium of Fowl-cholera, x 1200 (E.M.C.) . we A . Bacterium of Fowl-cholera, x 2500 (E.M.C.) . : . Bacterium of Fowl-cholera; Section from Liver of Fowl, x 700 (Fliigge) Bacillus of Humoirhepia depicts x 950 (pauigniteny « . Bacillus of Hemorrhagic Septicemia: Pure-culture in Gelatine (Baumgarten) . 3. Bacterium Pneumonize Chagnon from Pleural Cavity of a "Mouse, x 1500 (Zopf) . . Friedlander’s Pneumococcus ; ‘Pare-caleate a Nutrient Galatians (Baumgarten) . : j Capsule Cocci from Pneumonia, x 1500 (Bammesrten) Micrococcus of Sputum Septicemia, x 10C0 (Friinkel and Pfeiffer) . b XVii PAGE 157 158 160 162 168 174 177 177 183 184 185 187 188 190 192 193 194 194 195 195 197 203 205 218 218 221 222 223 225 228 228 228 229 231 231 234 234 235 236 Xvili LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS. FIG, 117. 118. 119. 120. 121. 122. 123. 124, 125, 126. F 127. Colonies of Sternberg’s Micrococcus, x 100 (Frankel and Pfeiffer) . Acute Catarrhal Pneumonia, x 480 (Hamilton) Infectious Pleuro-pneumonia of Cattle (Hamilton) Infectious Pleuro-pneumonia of Cattle (Hamilton) Bacillus of Influenza, x 1000 (Itzerott and ean Bacillus of Influenza, x 1200 (E.M.C) Bacilli of Plague and Phagocytes, x 800 (Aoyama) . Spirillum Obermeieri in Blood of Monkey inoculated with Spirilla after Removal of the Spleen (Soudakewitch) Pure-cultivations of Streptococcus Pyogenes (E.M.C.) ‘ree Surface of Diphtheritic Larynx, x 350 (Hamilton) Bacillus of Diphtheria; from a Cultivation on Blood Serum, x 1000 . (Frankel and Pfeiffer) . 28. Pure-cultures of Bacillus Diphtherie on Gigesvinny Gentine (B. M.C.) 9. Typhoid Fever. Teum of Adult, sali Sloughy and Infiltrated Patches (Hamilton) . Typhoid Bacilli from a Colony on Nuteioulk Gentine. x 1000 (Frankel and Pfeiffer) . Typhoid Bacilli, x 950 (Baumgarten . . Flagella of Typhoid Bacilli, x 1000 (Friinkel and Pfeiffer) 3. Colonies of the Typhoid Bacillus (Friinkel and Pfeiffer) . Pure-culture of Typhoid Bacilli inoculated in the Depth of Nubrient Gelatine (Baumgarten) 5. Typhoid Bacilli in a Section of eileen, x 800 ‘(Fltigge) . Typhoid Bacilli in a Section of Intestine invading the Subarieors and Muscular Layers, x 950 (Baumgarten) . . Ulceration of the Intestine in a Typical Case of Siite: fever (E. M.C. ) . Klein's Bacillus of Swine-fever (No. 1) . From a Preparation of Bronchial Mucus of mle s a favee Bacillus (No. 2) . Bacilli from an Aotiieial Cuiltare with Supres, Bacities No. 2 (Klein) - Blood of Fresh Spleen of a Mouse after Inoculation with Swine-fever Bacillus No. 2 (Klein). : : . . Bacilli of Swine Erysipelas (Caenmapastony 3 . Blood of Pigeon inoculated with Bacilli of Swine Hevsinetas, « 600 (Schiitz) . Pure-culture in Naldenk Gelatine of Basil Ppt Swine firysipelas (Baumgarten) . . Cover-glass Preparation of a Drop of Meat Takei Banaiantig a Pure-cultivation of Comma-bacilli (Koch) 3, Arthrospores of Comma-bacilli (Hueppe) 7. Flagella of Comma-bacilli ; stained ny Loffler’s Method (Frankel and Pfeiffer) . Involution Forms of Cente taal. x ‘700 (Van inmengem)) . Colonies of Comma-bacilli on Nutrient Gelatine ; natural size (Koch) . Colonies of Koch’s Comma-bacilli, x 60 (E.M.C.) . Cover-glass Preparation from the Contents of a Cholera Tntesting, x 600 (Koch) . Cover-glass Preparation of Cholera Dejecta on Te Tinen, x 600 (Koch) . . Section of the Mucous Membrane of a Chester inne. x 600 (Koch) . 2 . . . : . 363 364 LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS. . Pure-cultivations in Nutrient Gelatine of Koch’s and of Finkler’s Comma-bacilli (E.M.C.) . Comma-shaped Organisms with other Bacteria in Sewage- con- . taminated Water, x 1200 . Comma,-bacilli of the Mouth,. x: 700 (Van Ermengem) . Finkler’s Comma-bacilli, from Cholera nostras, x 700 (Fliigge) . Deneke’s Comma-bacilli, from Cheese, x 700 (Fliigge) . Pure-cultivation of the Spirillum Finkler-Prior, in Nutrient idlatine (E.M.C.) . Tropical Dysentery; Mucous Membrane of Lange Intestine (Hamilton) . Tubercle of the Lung in a very Early Stage, x 400 (Hamilton) . Primary Tubercle of Lung two to three weeks old, x 50 (Hamilton) . Large Oval Giant Cell from Tubercle of Lung, x 300 (Hamilton) . Bacillus Tuberculosis, from Tubercular Sputum, x 2500 (E.M.C.) . Pure-cultivation of the Tubercle Bacillus on Glycerine Agar-agar (£.M.C.) Pure-cultivation: in Gigeetine Aipans Shae sitter ten mouths! ers (E.M.C.) . Pure-cultivations of Tubevele Macillne:t in a Gtyeering Aoaeapgars a sub- culture from a Pure-culture in Glycerine Milk (E.M.C.) . Section through a Lupus Nodule of the Nose (Hamilton) . Tubercular Ulceration.of Mucosa of Ileum (Hamilton) . Section of Lupus of the Skin; Giant Cell containing Tubercle Bacillus (Fliigge) . Tuberculosis of Pleura; “ Grapes disease” (E. M. Cc.) . Tubercular Ulceration ‘it the Intestine of a Cow (E.M.C.) . Tubercular Ulceration of the Intestine of a Rabbit (E.M.C.). . Tubercular Lungs of Rabbit (E.M.C.) ‘ . Cover-glass Preparation of Pus from aChancre, x 1050 Ciastourteny . Wandering Cell containing Bacilli (Lustgarten) . Section of Liver from a Case of Actinomycosis in Man (E.M. ¢, ) . Actinomycotic Tumour in the Throat of a Steer (E.M.C) . Actinomycotic Tumour of the Cheek (E.M.C.) . . Steer with Emaciation the Result of-Actinomycosis (E.M.C. ) . Actinomycotic Growths from the. Pleura resembling ‘“ Grape- Disease ” (E.M.C.) : z : : : . Actinomycosis of the Skin (E.M. ©. ) . Part of Human Foot with Madura Disease (E. M. C.) . . Bacilli of Glanders, x 700 (Fliigge) . Section of a Branch of the Pulmonary reves sino wine Giandiors Bacilli penctrating the Wall (Hamilton) . Pure-culture of the Tetanus Bacillus in Grape-sugar Celatins (Frankel and Pfeiffer) . Foot of Sheep showing Disease of Horn (Brot) . Section through the Foot showing a Crack extending through the Wall . Secreting Membrane punted wit Pungoll Girowihs (uown} . Advanced Form of Disease of Skin between the Claws (Brown) . Distortion of Hoof in an Advanced Form of Foot-rot (Brown) . Diseased Comb (Cowan) . Spores of Bacillus Alvei (E.M.C. ) . Pure-culture in Nutrient Gelatine (Cheshire anil Gheptis) xix PAGE. 365 366 367 367 367 370 372 376 377 377 379 380 381 381 387 388 389 390 . 393 395 396 410 410 417 424 424 425 425 430 448 452 453 458 465 465 466 466 467 469 470 470 LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS. . Cultivation on the Surface of Gelatine acu and one) . Cladothrix Dichotoma (Zopf) A . Friedlander’s Pneumococcus, x 1500 (Zopf) . . Ascococcus Billrothii (Cohn) . Clostridium Butyricum (Prazmowski) . Bacillus Cyanogenus, x 650 (Neelsen) . Pure-cultivation of Bacillus figurans on the Surface of Nutrient Agar-agar (E.M.C.) . Photograph of Part of an jrepieasaen Preparation of Bacillus figurans on Nutrient Gelatine, x 50 (E.M.C.) . Part of the same Specimen, x 200 . Bacillus Indicus : Colonies in Agar, x 60 5. Bacillus Neapolitanus, x 700 (Emmerich) . Bacillus Megatherium (De Bary) ‘ . Pure-culture of Bacillus Megatherium in Gelatine (E, M. Cc. a . Bacillus Putrificus Coli, x 1000 (Bienstock) . ‘ Z ‘ . Bacillus Pyogenes Feetidus, x 790 (Passet) . ‘ : 3 . Bacillus Saprogenes, No. 1 (Rosenbach) . Bacillus Subtilis with Spores (Baumgarten) . Pure-culture of Bacillus Subtilis in Nutrient Gelatine CBaamearten),, . Pure-culture of Bacillus Subtilis on the Surface of Nutrient Agar (E.M.C) . Bacterium Zopfii ‘(Kurth) é . 5. Beggiatoa Alba (Zopf) . . . Phase-forms of Beggiatoa Persicina (Wanniaz) . Cladothrix Dichotoma (Zopf) . Crenothrix Kiihniana (Zopf) . ‘ . Leuconostoc Mesenteroides (Van Tieghem and Gieckowskis. . Micrococcus in Pyemia in Rabbits (Koch) ‘ . Proteus Mirabilis ; Swarming Islands on the Surface of Gelatine, x 285 (Hauser) . Proteus Mirabilis ; Involution Forms, x 624 (Hanser) . Proteus Vulgaris, x 285 (Hauser . Sarcina, x 600 (Fliigge) 5. Spirocheta Plicatile (E.M.C.) . ‘ : 3. Comma-bacilli in Water contaminated with Sewage . . Comma-bacilli of the Mouth, x 700 (Van Ermengem) . Deneke’s Comma-bacilli, from Cheese, x 700 (Fliigge) Streptococcus in Progressive Tissue Necrosis in Mice (Koch) . Vibrio Rugula, x 1020 (Prazmowski) . . Black Torula; Pure-cultivation on Potate (E. M. C.) - . Head and Neck of Calf with Advanced Ringworm (Brown) . Non-pigmented Amceboid Forms (Marchiafava and Celli) . Pigmented Amceboid Forms (Golgi) . Semi-lunar Bodies of Laveran (Golgi) . . Rosette Forms with Segmentation (Golgi) é Hlagellated Forms (Vandyke Carter) . “Surra” Parasites, occurring Singly and Fused, x 1200 . Parasites in the Blood of Rats (Lewis) . A Monad in Rat’s Blood, x 3000 (E.M.C.) . Monads in Rat’s Blood, x 1200 (E.M.C.) . Monads in Rat’s Blood stained with Methyl Violet, x "1200 (E, MLC, ) FIG. 243. 244, 245, 246, 247. 248, 249. 250. 251, 252. 253. 254. 255. 256. 257. 253. 259. 260. 261. 262. 263. 264. 265. 266. 267. 268. 269. 270. 971. 272. 273, LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS. Organisms in the Blood of Mud-fish (Mitrophanow) Organisms in the Blood of the Carp (Mitrophanow) Ameeba cola in Intestinal Mucus (Lésch) Warm Stage (Schiifer) Warm Stage (Stricker) . Combined Gas Chamber and Warm Stage (Stricker) s Vertical Micro-photographic Apparatus (Leitz) Koch's Steam Steriliser (Muencke) Hot-air Steriliser (Muencke) . Section of Hot-air Steriliser (Muencke) Hot-water Filtering Apparatus with Ring Tints Chohibecks Wire-cage for Test-tubes (Muencke) Platinum-needles (E.M.C.) Damp Chamber for Plate-cultivations (E. M.C. ) Apparatus for Plate-cultivations (E.M.C.) Box for Glass-plates (Muencke) Glass Benches for Glass-plates (Becker) Israel’s Case (Becker) -Damp Chamber for Potato CaNawations (E.M. 0. si Koch’s Serum Steriliser (Muencke) Serum Inspissator (Muencke) . : , D’Arsonval’s Incubator (Muencke) ’ Schlosing’s Membrane Regulator (Mioenékey « Gas Burner protected with Mica Cylinder (Muenckey Koch’s Safety Burner (Mueéncke) Babés’ Incubator (Muencke) Moitessier’s Gas-pressure Regulator (Muencke) Reichert’s Thermo-regulator (Muencke) Meyer’s Thermo-regulator (Muencke) . Siphon Bottle with Flexible Tube, Glass Nozle, anda : Mohr's 's Tings cock (E.M.C.) . 2 : : 4 ' Desiccator (E.M.C.) DESCRIPTION OF PLATES. DESCRIPTION OF PLATE I. Bacteria, Schizomycetes, or Fission Fungi. Following p. 14. 1. Cocci singly and varying in size. 2. Cocci in chains or rosaries (strepto- coccus). 3. Cocci in a mass (staphylococcus), 4 and 5. Cocci in pairs (diplococcus). 6. Cocci in groups of four (merismopedia). 7. Cocci in packets (sarcina). 8. Bacterium termo. 9. Bacterium termo x 4000 (Dallinger and Drysdale). 10. Bacterium septicemia hemorrhagice. 11. Bacterium pneu- monie croupose. 12. Bacillus subtilis. 13. Bacillus muriseptieus. 14. Bacillus diphtheria. 15. Bacillus typhosus (Eberth). 16. Spirillum undula (Cohn). 17%. Spirillum volutans (Cohn). 18. Spirillum cholere Asiatice. 19. Spirillum Obermeiert (Koch). 20. Spirocheta plicatilis (Fliigge). 21. Vibrio rugula (Prazmowski). 22. Cladothrix Forsteri (Cohn). 23. Cladothrix dichotoma (Cohn), 24. Monas Okenii (Cobn). 25. Monas Warmingii (Cobn). 26. Rhabdomonas rosea (Cohn). 27. Spore-formation (Bacillus alvei). 28. Spore-formation (Bacillus anthracis). 29. Spore-formation in bacilli cultivated from a rotten melon (Frinkel and Pfeiffer). 30. Spore-formation in bacilli cultivated from earth (Frankeland Pfeiffer). 31. Involution-form of Crenothriz (Zopf). 32. Involution-forms of Vibrio serpens (Warming). 33. Involution- forms of Vibrio rugula.(Warming). 34. Involution-forms of Clostridium polymyxa (after Prazmowski). 35. Involution-forms of Spirillum cholere Asiatice. 36. Involution-forms of Bacterium aceti (Zopf and Hansen). 37. Spirulina-form of Beggiatoa alba (Zopf). 38. Various thread-forms of Bacterium merismopedioides (Zopf). 39. False-branching of Cladothria (Zopf). DESCRIPTION OF PLATE II. Pure-cultivations of Bacteria. Following p. 100. Fie. 1.—In the depth of Nutrient Gelatine. A pure-cultivation of Koch’s comma-bacillus (Spirillum cholere Asiatice) skowing in the track of the needle a funnel-shaped area of liquefaction enclosing an air-bubble, and a white thread. Similar appearances are produced in cultivations of the comma-bacillus of Metchnikoff. Fig. 2.—On the surface of Nutrient Gelatine. A pure-cultivation of Bacillus typhosus on the surface of cbliquely solidified nutrient gelatine. xxii DESCRIPTION OF PLATES. xxili Fig. 3.—On the surface of Nutrient Agar-agar. Pure-cultivation of Bacillus indicus on the surface of obliquely solidified nutrient agar-agar. The growth has the colour of red sealing-wax, and a peculiar crinkled appearance. After some days it loses its bright colour and becomes purplish, like an old cultivation of Micrococcus prodigiosus. Fig. 4.—On the surface of Nutrient Agar-agar. A pure-cultivation obtained from an abscess (Staphylococcus pyogenes aureus). ; Fie. 5.—On the surface of Nutrient Agar-agar. A pure-cultivation obtained - from green pus (Bacillus pyocyaneus). The growth forms a whitish, transparent layer, composed of slender bacilli, and the green pigment is diffused throughout the nutrient jelly. The growth appears green by transmitted light, owing to the colour of the jelly behind it. ¥ie. 6.—-On the surface of Potato. A pure-cultivation of the bacillus of glanders on the surface of sterilised potato. DESCRIPTION OF PLATE III. Plate-cultivation. Following p. 108. This represents the appearance of a plate-cultivation of the comma-bacillus of Cholera nostras, when it is examined over a slab of blackened plate-glass. The drawing was made from a typical result of thinning out the colonies by the ane of plate-cultivation. At this stage they were completely isolated one from the other; but later they became confluent, and produced complete liquefaction of the gelatine. DESCRIPTION OF PLATE IV. Streptococcus Pyogenes. Following p. 178. Fig. 1—From a cover-glass preparation of pus from a pyzmic abscess. ‘Stained with gentian-violet by the method of Gram, and contrast-stained with eosin. x 1200. Powell and Lealand’s apochromatic ~, Hom. imm. E. P. 10. Fig. 2.—From cover-glass preparations of artificial cultivations of the strepto- coccus in broth and in milk at different stages of growth. x 1200. Powell and Lealand's apochromatic 7; Hom. imm. E. P. 10. In these preparations there is a great diversity in size and form of the chains and their component elements. In the drawing examples are figured of the following: (a) Branched chains. (b) Simple chains composed of elements much smaller than the average size. (ce) Chains with spherical and spindle-shaped elements at irregular intervals. These are conspicuous by their size, and are sometimes terminal. (d e) Chains in which the elements are more or less uniform in size. (f) Complex chains with elements dividing both longitudinally and transversely, and varying considerably in size in different lengths of the same chain. ‘ xxiv DESCRIPTION OF PLATES. DESCRIPTION OF PLATE V. Bacillus Anthracis. Following p. 192. N ¥1g.'1.—From a cover-glass preparation of blood from the spleen of a guinea- pig inoculated with blood from a sow. x 1200. Powell and Lealand’s apochromatic 7; Hom.imm. E, P. 10. Fig. 2.—From a section of a kidney of a mouse. Under a low power the preparation has exactly the appearance of an injected specimen. Under higher amplification the bacilli are seen to have threaded their way along the capillaries between the tubules, and to have collected in masses in the glomeruli. Stained with Gram’s method (gentian-violet), and eosin. x 500. : Fig. 3.— Bacillus anthracis and Micrococcus tetragenus. From a section from the lungs of a mouse which had been inoculated with anthrax three days after inoculation with Micrococcus tetragenus. A double or mixed infection resulted. Anthrax-bacilli occurred in vast numbers, completely filling the small vessels and capillaries, and in addition there were great numbers of tetrads. Stained by Gram’s method (gentian-violet), and with eosin. x 500. DESCRIPTION OF PLATE VI. Bacillus Murisepticus. Following p. 224. Fig. 1.—From a section of a kidney of a mouse which had died after inocula tion with a pure-cultivation of the bacillus. With moderate amplification, the white blood-corpuscles have a granular appearance, and irregular granular masses are scattered between the kidney tubules. Stained by Gram’s method with eosin. x 200. FIG. 2.—Part of the same preparation with high amplification. The granular appearances are found to be due to the presence of great numbers of ; extremely minute bacilli. x 1500. ; DESCRIPTION OF PLATE VII. Casual Cow-pox. Following p. 278. ¥ig. 1—Case of W. P——,a milker, infected from the teats of a cow with natural cow-pox. There was a large depressed vesicle with a small central crust and a tumid margin, the whole being surrounded by a well-marked areola and considerable surrounding induration. Fic. 2.—The same case a week later, showing a reddish-brown crust on a reddened elevated and indurated base. DESCRIPTION OF PLATES. XxVv DESCRIPTION OF PLATE VIII. Bacillus diphtheriz and Bacillus typhosus. Following p. 332. Fig. 1—Cover-glass preparation from a pure-cultivation of Bacillus diph- theriz on blood serum; obtained from the throat in a typical case of diphtheria. Stained with gentian-violet. x 1200. Fig. 2,—Cover-glass preparation from a pure-cultivation of Bacillus typhosus on nutrient-agar; from the spleen in a case of typhoid fever, Stained with gentian-violet. x 1200. DESCRIPTION OF PLATES IX, AND X. Swine Fever. Following p. 348. PLATE IX.—Part of intestine from a typical case of swine fever, showing scattered ulcers and ulceration of the ileo-czcal valve. PLATE X.—From the same case of swine fever. The lungs were extensively inflamed and partly consolidated, and the lymphatic glands were enlarged and of a deep red or reddish-purple colour. i DESCRIPTION OF PLATE XI. Bacillus tuberculosis. Following p. 378. The figures in this plate represent the bacilli of tuberculosis in different animals, examined under the same conditions of amplifica- tion and illumination. x 1200. Lamp-light illumination. Fie. 1.—Bacilli in pus from the wall of a human tubercular cavity. In this specimen the bacilli are shorter than those in tubercular sputum, and are very markedly beaded. Fig. 2.—Bacilli in pus from a tubercular cavity from another case in man. They are present in the preparation in enormous numbers. The proto- plasm occupies almost the whole of the sheath, and the bacilli are strikingly thin and long. Fig. 3.—Bacilli in sputum from an advanced case of phthisis, showing the ordinary appearance of bacilli in sputum; some beaded, others stained in their entirety; occurring both singly and in pairs, and in groups resembling Chinese letters. Fig. 4.—Bacilli in a section from the lung in a case of tuberculosis in man, The bacilli in human tuberculosis are found in, and between, the tissue cells ; and sometimes, as in equine and bovine tuberculosis, in the interior of giant cells, but not so commonly. Fig. 5.—From a cover-glass preparation of the deposit in a sample of milk from a tubercular cow. The bacilli were longer than the average length of bacilli in bovine tissue sections, and many were markedly beaded. XXVi DESCRIPTION OF PLATES. Fic. 6.—¥rom a section of the brain in a case of tubercular meningitis in a calf, showing a giant cell containing bacilli with the characters usually found in sections of bovine tuberculosis. Frc. 7—From a section of the liver of a pig with tubercle bacilli at the margin of a caseous nodule. Fra. 8.—From a cover-glass preparation of a crushed caseous mesenteric gland from a rabbit infected by ingestion of milk from a cow with tuberculosis of the udder, Fig. 9.—From a section of lung in a case of equine tuberculosis, showing a giant cell crowded with tubercle bacilli. Fiq..10.—From a section of lung from a case of tuberculosis in the cat, with , very numerous tubercle bacilli. Fig. 11.—From a cover-glass preparation of a crushed caseous nodule from the liver of a fowl, with masses of bacilli. These are for the most part short, straight rods; but other forms, varying from long rods to mere granules, are also found. Fie. 12.—From sections of the liver and of the lung in a case of tubercu- losis of a Rhea, Isolated bacilli are found, as well as bacilli packed in large cells, colonies of sinuous bacilli, and very long forms with terminal spore-like bodies and free oval grains, The preparations from which these figures were drawn were all stained by the Ziehl-Neelsen method, with the exception of the first, which was stained by Ehrlich’s method. DESCRIPTION OF PLATE XIL Tubercular Mammitis. Following p. 394. Fig. 1.—From a section of the udder of a milch cow. The tubercular deposit is seen to invade the lobules of the gland. Lobules comparatively healthy are marked off, more or less sharply, from the diseased ones in which the new growth in its progress compresses and obliterates the alveoli. Stained by the Ziehl-Neelsen method and with methylene-blue. x 50. Fia. 2.—Part of the same preparation. On the right of the section part of a healthy lobule is seen. On the left a lobule is invaded by tubercular new growth composed of round cells, epithelioid cells and typical giant cells. Tubercle bacilli can be seen both singly and collected in groups. They are found in and between the cells, and in the interior of giant cells. Bacilli may be seen between the cells lining an alveolus and projecting into its lumen. x 800. DESCRIPTION OF PLATE XIII. Tuberculosis in Swine. Following p. 400. Section of liver of a pig with scattered tubercular nodules. Microscopical sections of the liver showed tubercle bacilli in very small numbers, DESCRIPTION OF PLATES. XXVii DESCRIPTION OF PLATE XIV. Bacillus Lepra. © Following p. 408. Fre. 1.—From a section of the skin of a leper. The section is, almost in its entirety, stained red, and, with moderate amplification, has a finely granular appearance. Stained by the Ziehl-Neelsen method (catbblised fuchsine and methylene-blue). x 200. Fiq. 2.—Part of the same preparation with bigh amplification, showing that the appearances described above are due entirely to an invasion of the tissue by the bacilli of leprosy. x 1500. DESCRIPTION OF PLATES XV. AND XVI. Actinomyces. Following p. 432. PLATE XV, Fic. 1.—From a preparation of the grains from an actinomycotic abscess in a boy; examined in glycerine. The drawing has been made of a com- plete rosette examined by focussing successively the central and peripheral portions. Towards the centre the extremities of the clubs are alone visible; they vary in size, and if pressed upon by the cover-glass give the appearance of an irregular mosaic. Towards the periphery the clubs are seen in profile, and their characteristic form recognised. At one part there are several elongated elements, composed of separate links. x 1200. Fig. 2.—Different forms of clubs from preparations in which the rosettes have been flattened out by gentle pressure on the cover-glass. x 2500. (a) Single club. (4) Bifid club. (¢) Club giving rise to four secondary clubs. (d) Four clubs connected together, recalling the form of a bunch of bananas. (¢) Mature club with a lateral bud. (f) Apparently a further development of the condition represented at (e). (g) Club with a lateral bud and transverse segmentation. (h) Single club with double tranverse segmenta- tion. (é) Club with oblique segmentation. (j) Collection of four clubs, one with lateral gemmation, another with oblique segmentation, (%) Club with lateral buds on both sides, and cut off square at the extremity. (2) Club with a daughter club which bears at its extremity two still smaller clubs. (m) Club divided by transverse segmentation into four distinct elements, (n) Elongated club composed of several distinct elements. (0) and (~) Clubs with terminal gemmation. (q) Palmate group of clubs. (r) Trilobed club. (s) Club with apparently a central channel. (t) Filament bearing terminally a highly refractive oval body. PLATE XVI. Fic. 1.—From a section of a portion of the growth removed from a boy during life. The tissue was hardened in alcohol, and cut in celloidin. The section was stained by Gram’s method and with orange-rubin. x 50. Fic. 2,—From the same section. A mass of extremely fine filaments occupies the central part of the rosette. Many of the filaments have a terminal enlargement. The marginal part shows a palisade of clubs stained by the orange-rubin. x 500. Xxvili DESCRIPTION OF PLATES. Fes. 3 and 4.—From cover-glass preparations of the fungus teased out of the new growths produced by inoculation of a calf with pus from a boy suffering from pulmonary actinomycosis. Stained by Gram’s method and orange-rubin. The threads are stained blue and the clubs crimson (@) In the younger clubs the thread can be traced into the interior of the club (4). In some of the older clubs the central portion takes a yellowish stain, and in others the protoplasm is not continued as a thread, but is collected into a spherical or ovoid or pear-shaped mass. In others, again,’ irregular grains stained blue are scattered throughout the central portion (Fig. 4). x 1200. Fig. 5.—From a pure-culture on glycerine-agar. (@) branching filaments, (b) a mass of entangled filaments. Gram’s method. x 1200. Fig. 6.—From a similar but older cultivation. (a) a filament with spores, (b) chains of spores simulating streptococci. Gram’s method. » 1200. DESCRIPTION OF PLATES XVII. AND XVIII. Actinomycosis Bovis. Following p. 434. PLATE XVII. Section of an actinomycotic tongue stained by the method of Gram and with eosin. Fig. 1.—This illustrates the appearance which is usually seen under a low power, when a section is stained by Gram’s method and with eosin. The central portion of a mass of the fungus is either unstained or tinged with eosin, while the marginal portion is stained blue. The reverse is seen, as a rule, in sections from man ; although under a low power the general appear- ance of sections from these two sources is somewhat similar. x 50. Fig. 2.—a, b, c, d, represent the earliest recognisable forms of the ray fungus in the interior of leucocytes. In e the club-forms can be recognised. In f and g there are small stellate groups of clubs. x 500. Fig. 3.—A part of the section represented in Fig. 1, under a high power. The marginal line of blue observed under a low power is now recognised as the result of the stain being limited to the peripherally arranged clubs. At (a) part of a rosette has undergone calcification ; the clubs are granular, and have not retained the stain. At (4) and close to it there are the remains of rosettes in which the process of calcification is almost complete. x 500. ; Puate XVIII. The figures in this plate are taken from sections of a case of so-called “osteosarcoma,” in which the growth of the fungus was remarkably luxuriant. The specimens were stained by Plauts’ method. Fig. 1.—Different forms of clubs in different specimens: x 1200. (a) Very small club-shaped elements. (6) A club with transverse segmentation. (ce) A club with lateral daughter clubs. DESCRIPTION OF PLATES, xxix (4 and e) Clubs with terminal offshoots resembling teleutospores. (f) A club with developing daughter clubs on the left, and on the right a mature secondary club. (g) A segmental club with lateral offshoots. (A) “Two clubs undergoing calcification. Fig. 2.—A very remarkable stellate growth comprised of nine wedge-shaped collections of clubs radiating from a mass of finely granular material. x 500. Fic. 3.—A rosette undergoing central calcification, and consisting in part of extremely elongated clubs resembling paraphyses. Calcareous matter is also being deposited in the club-shaped structures. x 500. Fie, 4.—Part of a rosette with continuation of the club-shaped bodies into transversely segmented Wepnebing cells apparently representing short hyphe. .« 500. Fig. 5.—A ‘rosette from another section in which similar appearances are observed as in Fig. 4. x 500. DESCRIPTION OF PLATE XIX. Pure-cultivations of Actinomyces. Following p. 488. These tubes were selected from a great number of cultivations in which there were different appearances. In some instances the growths had a faint tinge of pink. Fig. 1.—Pure-cultivation on the surface of potato, showing a luxuriant sulphur-yellow growth entirely composed of entangled masses of fila- ments. After three months’ growth. Fig. 2.—Pure-culture from the same series, on glycerine-agar. In this case the culture remained perfectly white. The jelly was coloured reddish- brown. After fifteen months’ growth. Fig.°3.—Pure- culture on glycerine-agar in which the growth was dark- brown, in parts black, and the jelly stained dark-brown. After nearly two years’ growth. DESCRIPTION OF PLATES XX. AND XXI. Actinomycosis Bovis. Following p. 440. PLATE XX. Fie. 1.—From a section of an actinomycotic tongue stained by the triple method (Ziehl-Neelsen, logwood and orange-rubin). In this section the separate centres of growth are clearly shown. Each neoplasm consists of a fungus system, in which the masses of the fungus, situated more or less centrally, are surrounded with round cells, epithelioid cells, sometimes giant cells, and lastly fibrous tissue forming a more or less distinct capsule. In parts the fungi have fallen out of the section. x 50. Fie. 2.—From a section of a ‘‘tubercular” nodule from the lungs of a Norfolk heifer with pulmonary actinomycosis. The nodule is a multiple growth surrounding a bronchus, and is enclosed by a capsule, in the XXX DESCRIPTION OF PLATES. vicinity of which the pulmonary alveoli are compressed. It is composed of a number of separate neoplasms, and each of the latter is composed of secondary centres of growth resembling the giant-cell systems of bacillary tuberculosis. The new growth is composed of ray-fungi, large multi- nucleated cells, sometimes distinct giant cells, round cells, epithelioid cells, and, surrounding them, fibrous tissue. On examination of the same specimen with a higher power the typical rosettes of clubs are sometimes surrounded by multinucleated cells, and sometimes small rosettes are found like tubercle bacilli, in the interior of giant cells. From a pre- paration stained by Ziehl-Neelsen, logwood, and orange-rubin. x 50. PLATE XXI. Fie. 1.—(a@) A leucocyte containing the fungus in its earliest recognisable form. (%) A large multinucleated cell containing the fungus in an early stage with the club-form already visible. (¢) A leucocyte containing a small stellate fungus. (d@) A large cell containing clubs arranged in a small rosette. (¢) A multinucleated cell with clubs arranged in a palmate form. All the above are drawn from sections of actinomycotic tongues stained by the triple method. x 500. Fig. 2.—A giant cell with large vesicular nuclei at the periphery, and in the centre a fully formed rosette of actinomyces with a smaller growth within a “daughter” cell. From a section of the tongue of an ox stained by the triple method. x 500. Fic. 3.—A very large circular giant cell, with its ring of nuclei at the periphery, enclosing several isolated tufts of actinomyces. From a section of a nodule in the lung. Stained by the triple method. x 500. Fic. 4.—Three rosettes of actinomyces surrounded by a row of large, some- what angular multinucleated cells. From a section of the tongue of an ox stained by the triple method. x 430. : DESCRIPTION OF PLATE XXII. Bacillus tetani. Following p. 458, Fic, 1.—From a cover-glass preparation of a pure-cultivation of the tetanus bacillus in broth; stained with Neelsen’s carbolised fuchsine. » 1200. Lamplight illumination. Fre, 2.—From a cover-glass preparation from the same source; stained with’ Neelsen’s solution and methylene blue. x 1200. Lamplight illumination. PART I. THEORETICAL AND TECHNICAL. BACTERIOLOGY: AND INFECTIVE DISEASES. CHAPTER I. HISTORICAL INTRODUCTION. Tue researches of Pasteur into the réle played by bacteria in the processes of fermentation and putrefaction, and the investigations of ‘the practical mind of Lister, with the resulting evolution of antiseptic surgery, demonstrated the necessity for a more intimate acquaint- ance with the life-history of these micro-organisms. Further re- searches in diseases such as anthrax, the silkworm malady, pyemia, septicemia, and fowl-cholera, invested the science of Bacteriology with universal interest and vast importance; while the investiga- tions which established an intimate connection between bacteria and other infective diseases, and more especially the discovery by Koch of bacteria in tuberculosis and in Asiatic cholera, claimed the attention of the whole thinking world. Those bacteria which are connected with disease, and. more especially those which have been proved to be the causa cwusans, are of predominant interest and importance. The first attempt to demonstrate the existence of a contagium vivum dates back almost to the discovery of the microscope. Athanasius Kircher, nearly two and a half centuries ago, expressed his belief that there were definite micro-organisms to which diseases were attributable. The microscope had revealed that all decom- posing substances swarmed with countless micro-organisms which were invisible to the naked eye, and Kircher sought for similar organisms in diseases which he considered might be due to their agency. The microscope which he described obviously could not 1 2 BACTERIOLOGY. admit of the possibility of studying, or even detecting, the micro- organisms which are now known to be associated with certain diseases ; and it is not surprising that his teachings did not at the time gain much attention. They were destined, however, to receive a great impetus from the discoveries which emanated from ‘the father of microscopy.” Antony van Leeuwenhoek had learned as 4 youth to grind and polish lenses, and later in life employed his spare time in constructing microscopes, and in conducting those researches which have made for him a name which is familiar to all microscopists. His researches were published in a series of letters to the Royal Society. In 1675 he described extremely minute organisms in rain-water, well-water, infusions of pepper, hay, and other vegetable and animal substances, in saliva, and in scrapings from the teeth; and, further, he was able to differentiate these minute living things by their size, their form, and the character of their movements. In 1683 these discoveries were illustrated by means of woodcuts, and there can be little doubt, from the drawings of these micro-organisms, that they are intended to represent leptothrix filaments, vibrios, and spirilla. Indeed, we can almost recognise these micro-organisms as bacteria from Leeuwenhoek’s graphic descriptions, apart from his figures. They were described as moving in the most characteristic manner, progressing with great rapidity, or spinning round like a top, and so excessively minute that they were only perceived with great difficulty. The smallest forms could hardly be examined individually ; but, viewed en masse, they closely resembled a swarm of gnats or flies. In another communication, published in 1692, he gives some idea of the size of these animalcules by stating that they were a thousand times smaller than a grain of sand. Others which were, comparatively speaking, of considerable length, were characterised by their peculiar mode of progression, bending and rolling on themselves—movements which, he adds, created both delight and astonishment in the mind of the observer. Leeuwenhoek himself was not disposed to believe in the possibility of such organisms being found in the blood in disease; but as soon as he had proved the actual existence of such minute creatures, theoretical physicians were not wanting who at once attributed various maladies to their agency. Among these, Nicholas Andry is made conspicuous by his work published in 1701, Andry classed the minute organisms discovered by Leeuwenhoek as worms. In 1718 Lancisi believed that the deleterious effect. of the air of malarial districts depended upon animalcules, and others considered HISTORICAL INTRODUCTION, 3 that the plague in Toulon and Marseilles in 1721 arose from a similar cause. In fact, by some, all diseases were attributed to vermicules, and this led to the theory being ridiculed and discredited. In spite of adverse criticism, the theory of contagium vivum survived, and Linnzus acknowledged it by placing the micro- organisms discovered by Leeuwenhoek, the contagia of specific fevers, and the causes of putrefaction and fermentation, into one class—‘ chaos.” The theory was further supported by the writings of Plenciz, who, in 1762, very ably discussed the nature of contagium, as well as the relation of animalcules to putrefaction and disease. However, no proofs in support of these theories were forthcoming, and gradually the idea of contagiwm vivum fell into obscurity, and indeed came to be regarded by some as an absurd hypothesis. Though a causal relation of animalcules to diseases was for a time discredited, the natural history of these micro-organisms was studied with increasing interest. In 1778 Baron Gleichen described and figured a great number of micro-organisms which he had discovered in various vegetable infusions. Joblot, Lesser, Réaumur, Hill, and many others worked at the same subject. Hill remarked that there was hardly the least portion of matter or the least drop of fluid of any kind naturally found in the earth, which was not. inhabited by multitudes of animalcules. But these observers inclined rather to searching for new forms than to studying more thoroughly those which had been already discovered; and, as a result, but little scientific progress was made until the time of Miiller, of Copen- hagen. Miller, in 1786, criticised the work of previous writers, and pointed out that they had been too much occupied with merely finding new micro-organisms. Miiller took into account the form of the micro-organism, its mode of progression, and other biological characters, and on such data based a classification. Thus the scientific knowledge of these minute beings was considerably advanced by his writings and illustrations. The subject which now eclipsed all others in interest was the origin of these micro-organisms. Two rival theories were widely discussed—spontaneous generation, and development from pre-exist- ing germs; and the researches that were made in the course of this discussion, and the discoveries which resulted, indirectly yet: materially advanced the germ theory of disease, and explain many of the phenomena in the life-history of the pathogenic microbes. which have been brought to light in recent years. Spontaneous development of micro-organisms in putrescible infusions was believed in by many, but was supported by no one 4 BACTERIOLOGY. with greater persistency than Needham. Needham found that animalcules readily developed when meat infusion was boiled anp transferred to a well-stoppered flask, and he could only explain this by supposing that they originated spontaneously from the material of the infusion. In 1768 Bonnet strenuously opposed these conclusions on purely theoretical grounds, and maintained that it was far more probable that the ova of the animalcules were present in the infusions or were suspended in the air enclosed in the flask. Spallanzani was the first to demonstrate by experiment the correctness of Bonnet’s arguments. It occurred to him to boil the infusion in flasks, and to seal the vessels during the process of boiling. As a result the flasks remained free from putrefaction, and animalcules only developed when the infusion was exposed to the air by making a hole in the flask. That Spallanzani’s experiments were reliable, and his conclusions correct, was evidenced by the fact that his simple precaution led to great practical results, as Francois Appert introduced, on this principle, the method of preserving meats, vegetables, and other provisions. The disciples of Needham nevertheless brought forward counter objections. Treviranus urged that a certain guantity and quality of air was necessary for the spontaneous development of these infusoria, and that by sealing the flasks, too small a quantity of air was in contact with the infusion, and, further, that this air had become changed in quality by the process of boiling. Spallanzani argued against these objections, but did not support his opinions by further experiments, so that the question remained for a time undecided. In 1836 Francis Schulze devised an experiment which brought still further evidence against Needham’s theory. Schulze filled a glass vessel half full with distilled water and different animal and vegetable substances. This was plugged with a doubly-bored cork, and through each perforation a glass tube was introduced, bent at a right angle. On boiling the flask, steam issued freely from each tube, and all parts were thoroughly sterilised. Each tube was then connected with a bulbed tube, one bulb containing concentrated sulphuric acid and the other a solution of potash. Fresh air was drawn into the flask by aspiration, and this was deprived of any germs which might be present by its passage through the sulphuric acid. The result was that the infusion remained without any development of micro-organisms. When, on the other hand, air was admitted without first being drawn through the sulphuric acid, the infusion in a short time teemed with animalcules. In other words, ~ HISTORICAL INTRODUCTION, o Schulze demonstrated that in spite of free access to air, which had not been heated, the infusions remained free from germs. Schwann, in 1837, arrived at similar results. He found that putrescible substances remained sterile if exposed to an abundant supply of air which was heated by being passed through a melted mix- ture of metals. This convinced him that the cause of the decompo- sition which would otherwise have occurred must exist in the air. The objection remained that in the experiments of Schulze and Schwann, the air which was admitted to the flasks had undergone either a chemical or a thermal change, and therefore the theory of Needham was not yet entirely disposed of. In 1854 the final blow was dealt by Schroder and Van Dusch. These investigators demonstrated that decomposition could be obviated without resorting either to thermal or chemical treatment of the air, as simple filtration of the air through cotton-wool was shown to. be efficacious in excluding germs. Finally, Hoffman in 1860, and independently, Chevreuil and Pasteur in 1861, showed that even cotton-wool could be dispensed with, as a sterile solution would remain sterile when the neck of the vessel was bent into an S-shaped curve. Micro-organisms in the air entering the flask were deposited by gravitation in the bend of the tube. The advocates of spontaneous generation were ready with fresh objections. They now urged that the medium lost its power of undergoing decomposition by being boiled. This objection was at once set aside by the fact that when unfiltered air was admitted to the infusion, decomposition set in. Additional evidence was brought against spontaneous generation by the experiments of Pasteur, Burdon Sanderson, Lister, and others, in which it was shown that blood, urine, and milk would remain without decomposition, when all precautions were adopted to avoid contamination in filling the sterilised flasks. Even at this stage of this great scientific controversy fresh difficulties arose, for it was found that in certain solutions which had been boiled and hermetically sealed in flasks micro-organisms made their appearance. In 1872 Charlton Bastian published a research which was to prove that spontaneous generation actually took place. Decoctions of turnip and cheese which had been filtered, neutralised, and boiled for ten minutes, and hermetically sealed during the boiling, were found after a time to contain micro organisms. These results, however, were before long explained by the fact that in milk, infusions of hay, and certain other decoctions, the spores of bacilli are present, which are much more resistant 6 BACTERIOLOGY. than the bacilli themselves. In such cases mere scalding or boiling for a few minutes will not sterilise the solution. The bacilli are destroyed, but not their spores; and if the latter remain unhurt, they will germinate, and rapidly multiply. But if, as Tyndall found, the boiling be repeated a second and a third time, all the spores will be destroyed; for in the intervals between the boilings the spores sprout into bacilli, and the bacilli at the next boiling perish ; so that after three or four repeated boilings the infusion is rendered perfectly free from germs. While this discussion was occupying the attention of the whole scientific world, some investigators had been again following up the theory of a connection between micro-organisms and disease. In 1837 Cagniard Latour and Schwann independently made the discovery that the yeast plant was a living organism, and the true cause of yeast fermentation. The close analogy between the pro- cesses of fermentation and of certain diseases had long been held; and, therefore, when it was proved that fermentation was due to a micro-organism, fresh advocates appeared in support of the theory that diseases were produced by similar agencies. Boehm, in 1838, described certain organisms in cholera, which was at that time raging in Europe; but the researches of Bassi, who a year previously had discovered the cause of a disease of silkworms, attracted much greater attention. Bassi discovered that in this disease extremely minute spores existed on the bodies of the worms, which were conveyed from the sick to the healthy. They destroyed the healthy worms by germinating in their skins and growing into their bodies. These discoveries may be said to have brought the theory of contagium vivum to life again; and Henle, in reviewing the facts of the case in 1840, came to the conclusion that the cause of all contagious diseases must be of a living nature, and this he maintained, although he had searched in vaecine and small-pox lymph, in the desquamation of scarlet fever, and in other diseases without success. Bassi’s discovery and Henle’s doctrine encouraged a number of investigators, and remarkable results followed. In favus, in herpes tonsurans, in pityriasis versicolor, fungus threads and spores were found, and were regarded as being of etiological importance, inasmuch as the morbid lesions corresponded with the growth of the particular fungus. Cholera became especially a subject for research. Swaine, Brittan, and Budd found micro-organisms in choleraic dejecta. Davaine described certain monads in the intestinal contents, but no HISTORICAL INTRODUCTION. 7 causal connection was established between these organisms and the disease ; and when the cholera disappeared the interest in contagium vivum waned, and was eclipsed by the question of fermentation. The discoveries which followed in this subject had a very important bearing on the micro-parasitic origin of communicable diseases. Pasteur, following up the researches of Cagniard Latour and Schwann, demonstrated in 1857 that the lactic, acetic, and butyric fermentations were produced by micro-organisms. Previously to this, in 1850, Davaine and Rayer had noted the existence of little rod-like or filamentous bodies about the size of a blood corpuscle in the blood of a sheep that had died of splenic fever. Pollender had seen similar bodies in the blood of cows. Davaine did not at first pay much heed to this discovery ; but in 1863 he thoroughly reinvestigated the subject, and conducted a series of experiments which led him to the conclusion that the actual cause of splenic fever was an organised heing whose presence and multiplication in the blood produced changes in that fluid of the nature of fermentation, resulting in the death of the animal. These conclusions were not accepted by all, and indeed, the evidence was so far incomplete that sceptics were justified in con- sidering that these experiments afforded only a working hypothesis. But Davaine’s comparison between this disease and fermentation attracted the attention of Pasteur, whose mind had been fully trained for entering upon this investigation by the researches which he had been carrying on in the interval between Davaine’s publications of 1857 and 1863. Pasteur, as already mentioned, had been working at fermentation, and his attention was next directed to studying the so-called diseases of wines, and subsequently to a contagious disease which committed ravages among silkworms. By laborious researches Pasteur was able to confirm the belief that this disease of silkworms was due to the presence of micro-organisms discernible with the aid of the micro- scope. These oval shining bodies in the moth, worm, and eggs had been previously observed by Cornalia, and described by Niageli as Nosema bombycis, and by Lebert as Panhistophyton. But it was reserved for Pasteur to introduce a means of combating the disease. Pasteur showed that when a silkworm, whose body contained these micro-organisms, was pounded up with water in a mortar, and the mixture painted with « brush on the leaves on which healthy worms were fed, they would all without fail succumb to the disease. As the contagious particles were transmitted to the eggs, a method for preventing the spread of the disease suggested itself. 8 BACTERIOLOGY. Each female moth was kept separate from the others, and allowed to deposit her eggs on a small linen cloth. The moth was then pinned to the corner of the cloth, and left for future examination. When the time for this arrived, the moth was crushed up with water in a mortar, and a drop examined under the microscope. When any trace of corpuscular matter was found to be present, the cloth with its collection of eggs was burnt; and if not, the eggs were set aside for use. Complete as this appears to be as a demonstration of a causal connection between the micro-organisms and the disease, it could obviously be objected that there was no distinct proof that the corpuscular bodies constituted the actual contagium. There was no isolation of the organisms, no artificial cultivation of them apart from the diseased moth or worm, and subsequent production of the disease by means of the isolated organisms. The same objection was applicable to Davaine’s investigations. Davaine found rods in association with anthrax, and maintained that they were causally related ; but others stated that it was possible to inoculate animals with anthrax blood containing rods, and to produce the disease without being able to detect the rods again in the blood of the animal experimented upon. It was also urged that it was possible to infect with anthrax blood after the rods had disappeared, and to find a reappearance of the bacilli in the blood of the inoculated animal. The well-known fact that anthrax was especially prevalent in certain seasons and certain localities appeared to lend great support to these objections. The disease, in fact, was regarded by some as originating from peculiar conditions of climate and soil. The fallacies im these objections were, however, rapidly dispelled. Bollinger, in 1872, pointed out that the blood, from which the rods had disappeared, was still virulent owing to the presence of the spores of the bacillus, and that it was owing to the soil being impreg- nated with these spores that the disease broke out in certain localities. Yet there still remained many who refused to regard these particles as living bodies, some looking upon them simply as crystals; and the question of their importance remained undecided for several years. In 1877 Robert Koch published a memoir in which he fully described the life-history of the anthrax or splenic fever bacillus, and gave a complete demonstration of the life-history of the micro- organism, and the definite proofs of its pathogenic properties. He pointed out how the rods grew in the blood and tissues by lengthen- HISTORICAL INTRODUCTION. 9 ing and by cross division. Further, that in the blood or in serum or in aqueous humour they not only grew into long leptothrix filaments, but they produced enormous numbers of seeds or spores. He traced, by continuous observation on the warm stage, the whole life cycle, from the fission of the rods to the formation of spores and the sprouting of the spores into fresh rods. Further, he carried on the disease by inoculating from mouse to mouse for several generations, and observed that in the blood of the animal and in the swollen spleen the glass-like rods were always to be found. Pasteur also studied the microbe of splenic fever, and amply confirmed and extended the observations of Koch by his researches on the attenuation of the anthrax virus. Pasteur also met with adverse criticism. Paul Bert argued that the bacilli were of no importance, because he could destroy them by exposing material containing them to great pressure, and yet the material produced the disease on inoculation. But such measures did not destroy the spores; and finally, Paul Bert was convinced of his error when Pasteur demonstrated cultures of the anthrax bacillus in urine, from which successive generations were started, and that with such cultivations the disease could always be produced. It was, however, principally the researches of Koch which placed the doctrine of contagiwm vivum on a scientific basis. Koch’s improvements in the methods of cultivation, his recom- mendation of the necessary microscopical apparatus, his histological methods for examining these minute organisms, and his famous postulates for proving beyond controversy the existence of specific pathogenic micro-organisms, elevated the theory of contagium vivum to a demonstrated and established fact. The chain of evidence regarded by Koch as essential for proving the existence of a pathogenic organism was as follows :— 1. The micro-organism must be found in the blood, lymph, or diseased tissue of man or animal suffering from or dead of the disease. 2. The micro-organisms must be isolated from the blood, lymph, or tissues, and cultivated in suitable media—i.e., outside the animal body. These pure cultivations must be carried on through successive generations of the organism. 3. A pure cultivation thus obtained must, when introduced into the body of a healthy animal, produce the disease in question. 4, In the inoculated animal the same micro-organism must again ke found. 10 BACTERIOLOGY. The chain of evidence is still more complete if we can from artificial cultures obtain a chemical substance which is capable of producing the disease independently of living micro-organisms. It is of very little value merely to detect or artificially to cultivate a bacterium associated with disease. We must endeavour to establish the exact relationship of the bacteria to disease processes, and the determination of the true pathogenic microbe is beset with fallacies. In many diseases bacteria have been regarded as the actual contagia, until a searching inquiry by other investigators has shown that the evidence was most unsatisfactory or entirely misleading. For example, in diseases with lesions of the external or internal linings of the body, extraneous micro-organisms may get into the circulation and be swept into the internal organs, where they either perish in the battle with the healthy tissues which are opposed to their existence, or they may gain the upper hand, and set up destructive processes. Such organisms, when found in association with these diseases, may be discovered in the blood and internal organs; and though only accidental epiphytes, often associated with septic complication, they may too readily be accepted by the enthusiast as the actual contagium of the disease in question. It is only when such fallacies are exposed that we are brought once more face to face with the fact that the nature of the contagium in hydrophobia, variola, vaccinia, scarlet fever, measles, and many other diseases, is still undetermined. CHAPTER II. MORPHOLOGY AND PHYSIOLOGY OF BACTERIA. Bacrerta may be considered as minute vegetable cells destitute of nuclei. They are distinguished from animal cells by being able to derive their nitrogen from ammonia compounds, and they differ from the higher vegetable cells in being unable to split up carbonic acid into its elements, owing to the absence of chlorophyll. Von Engelmann and Van Tieghem include among the bacteria certain organisms, named by them Bacterium chlorinum, Bacterium viride, and Bacillus virens, which are coloured green by this substance, but it is quite possible that they may be Algz, and further researches are required before any conclusions are definitely arrived at as to the exact place these particular organisms occupy in the vegetable kingdom. Composition.—For our knowledge of the chemical composition of bacteria we are chiefly indebted to Nencki. Their constituents are found on analysis to vary slightly, according to whether the bacteria are in zoolgcea or in the active state. In the latter condition they are said to consist of 83°42 per cent. of water. In one hundred parts of the dried constituents there are the following :— A nitrogenous body . : ; : : 84:20 Fat. ‘ ' ‘ ; : ; 6:04 Ash . : ; : 3 ; ; : 4:72 Undetermined substances . : ‘ : 5-04 This nitrogenous body is called myco-protein, and consists of Carbon ‘ : : : ‘ ; 52°32 Hydrogen . . : : : , ‘ 755 Nitrogen . , ‘ ‘ , : 5 14:75 but no sulphur or phosphorus. The nitrogenous body appears to vary in different species, for in Bacillus anthracis a substance has been obtained which does not 11° 12 BACTERIOLOGY. give the reactions of myco-protein, and, therefore, is distinguished as anthrax-protein. Considering bacteria as cells, we may speak of the cell-wall and the cell-contents. The cell-wall consists of cellulose, or, according to Nencki, in the putrefactive bacteria of myco-protein. It may be demonstrated by the action of iodine, which contracts the proto- plasmic contents, and renders the cell-wall visible. By staining cover-glass preparations of the anthrax bacillus by the method of Gram, the rods are at first uniformly stained, by subjecting them to iodine solution the protoplasmic contents are contracted, and alcohol decolorises the sheath, which may be then stained in contrast, with eosin. The cell-wall may be either pliable or rigid. liability is observed in the long filaments, which are endowed with a slow vermicular movement, while rigidity accounts for the maintenance of the characteristic form of several species, such as spirilla. The cell-protoplasm yields myco-protein. In some itis homogene- ous, and in others granular. The action of the aniline dyes indicates a close relation to nuclear protoplasm, though all nuclear stains are not suitable for bacteria. In some cases also the bacteria remain stained under the influence of a reagent, which removes the colour from nuclei. The power of fixing the stain is not always present, and indicates a difference in the protoplasm of different species. Thus in staining phthisical sputum, the nitric acid removes the stain from all bacteria and bacilli present, with the exception of the tubercle bacillus. This difference in the protoplasm of different species is also illustrated by the necessity, in many cases, of using special processes, owing to the ordinary methods being unsatisfactory or not producing any result. The protoplasm of some bacteria contains starch granules; thus Clostridium butyricum gives the starch reaction with iodine. Sulphur granules are present in some species of Beggiatoa which thrive in sulphur springs. The colouring-matter of the pigmented bacteria is probably external to the cell asa rule: for example, in Micrococcus prodigiosus the pigment granules are distictly between the cells; on the gther hand, in Beggiatoa roseo-persicina, or the peach-coloured bacterium, the special pigment bacterio-purpurin appears to be dissolved in the cell protoplasm. In Bacillus pyocyaneus the pigment is certainly not localised entirely in the cell, for it becomes rapidly diffused in the surrounding medium, considerably beyond the confines of the growth itself. In several species, either as a result of a secretion from the cell or MORPHOLOGY AND PHYSIOLOGY OF BACTERIA. 13 of the absorption of moisture and consequent swelling of the outer layer of the cell-wall, a mucinous or gelatinous envelope develops around them. This envelope may form a capsule, such as we meet with in certain bacteria found in the rusty sputum of pneumonia, and in Micrococcus tetragenus ; or it may occur as a continuous sheath around a chain of bacteria, which by its disappearance sets free the individual links.’ The capsule is soluble in water, and under some circumstances is difficult to demonstrate. In the preumo- coccus of Friedlinder the capsule disappears on cultivation, but reappears in preparations made from an inoculated animal. In the pleuritic fluid of a mouse these cocci are often found with a parti- cularly well-marked capsule, and in other encapsuled cocci the extent of the envelope has been observed to vary considerably in the same species of bacterium. When this gelatinous material forms a matrix, in which numbers of bacteria are congregated in an irregular mass, we have what is termed a zo00glea. The zooglean stage is a resting stage, often preceded or followed by a motile stage. Thus bacteria may be present in a solution in an active state, and after a time a scum or pellicle forms on the surface of the liquid, which consists of zooglea. At the edges of the zooglea, individuals may be seen to again become motile, and after detaching themselves to swim off in the surrounding fluid. The zooglean stage may be observed sometimes in cultivations in broth, and also in nutrient gelatine which has become liquefied. The inoculated bacteria grow and multiply, and after a time a film appears on the surface of the liquefied layer. In cultivations on potato the appearances in this stage are varied, and sometimes extremely characteristic. In the case of a bacillus which readily develops on unsterilised potatoes, the zooglea may spread over the cut surface, forming a pellicle which can be raised en masse like a delicate veil. Another bacillus forms a zooglea, consisting of a tenacious layer which can be drawn out in long stringy threads. In Ascococcus Billrothii the gelatinous envelope develops to such an enormous extent that it forms the characteristic feature of the species. (Fig. 1.) Form.—The individual cells vary in form, and may either remain isolated or attached to each other. Round cells and egg- shaped cells are called cocci, The spherical form is the most common, but cocci are occasionally exclusively ovoid, as in Strepto- coceus bombycis. The giant cocci of some species are spoken of as megacocci, to distinguish them from the ordinary cocci, or micrococci. 14 BACTERIOLOGY. The fission by which the cocci increase may take place in one direction only, and if the two resulting cells remain attached to each other they form a diplococcus. If these two cells again divide, and the resulting cells remain linked together, we get a chain or rosary, termed streptococcus. These chains may consist of a few individuals linked together, or of several hundreds, in which case the chains are generally curved or twisted. When the division occurs in two directions, so that four cocci result, a tetrad or merismopedia is formed ; when in three directions, one coccus divides into eight, and the result is a packet form or sarcinacoccus. Immediately after division, the daughter cells are not perfectly circular, but are flattened or facetted where they are opposite to Fic. 1.—Ascococcus Bintrorum, x 65. [After Cohn.] each other. They gradually become rounded off, and each daughter cell is then ready to divide in its turn. In other cases the cocci after division only form irregular heaps or collections like bunches of grapes. This form is sometimes distinguished as staphylococcus, but it cannot be considered an important feature. When we find irregular masses of cocci united by intercellular substance and embedded in a tough gelatinous matrix, the form is described as ascococcus. Another type is the rod, characteristic of bacterium and bacillus. The rods may vary considerably in length. The very short rods with rounded ends are difficult to distinguish from the oval cocci, but ‘differ in that a rod, however short it may be, must have two sides parallel. The vibrio or bent rod may be considered as the connecting link between the rods and the corkscrew forms or DESCRIPTION OF PLATE I. Bacteria, Schizomycetes, or Fission Fungi. 1, Cocci singly and varying in size. 2. Cocci in chains or rosaries (strepto- coceus), 3. Cocci in a mass (staphylococcus). 4 and 5. Cocci in pairs (diplococcus). 6. Cocci in groups of four (merismopedia). 7. Cocci in packets (sarcina). 8. Bacterium termo. 9. Bacterium termo x 4000 (Dallinger and Drysdale). 10. Bacterium septicemie hemorrhagice. 11. Bacterium pneu- monie croupose. 12. Bacillus subtilis. 13. Bacillus murisepticus. 14. Bacillus diphtheria. 15. Bacillus typhosus (Eberth). 16. Spiriliwm wndula (Cohn). 17. Spirillum volutans (Cohn). 18. Spirillwm cholere Asiatice. 19. Spirillum Obermeiert (Koch). 20. Spirocheta plicatilis (Fliigge). 21. Vibrio rugula (Prazmowski). 22. Cladothrix Férsteri (Cohn). 23. Cladothria dichotoma (Cohn). 24. Monas Okenii (Cohn). 25. Monas Warmingii (Cohn). 26. Rhabdomonas rosea (Cohn). 27. Spore-formation (Bacillus alvei). 28. Spore-formation (Bacillus anthracis). 29. Spore-formation in bacilli cultivated from a rotten melon (Frankel and Pfeiffer). 30. Spore-formation in bacilli cultivated from earth (Frankel and Pfeiffer). 31. Involution-form of Crenothria (Zopf). 32. Involution-forms of Vibrio serpens (Warming). 33. Involution- forms of Vibrio rugula (Warming). 34, Involution-forms of Clostridiwm polymyxa (after Prazmowski). 35. Involution-forms of Spirillum cholere Asiatice. 36. Involution-forms of Bacterium aceti (Zopf and Hansen). 37. Spirulina-form of Beggiatoa alba (Zopf). 38. Various thread-forms, of Bacterium merismopedioides (Zopf). 39. False-branching of Cladothria (Zopf). Fia. 30 =a is i =_ ee Pe22es evaee@0cs5 ©20e8ee —_ —— & 2 6 Sec y & S BACTERLA, SC HIZOVYCETES, OR: FISSION FUNGI, MORPHOLOGY AND PHYSIOLOGY OF BACTERIA. 15 spirilla, Lastly, we have the filamentous forms, which may be straight, leptothria, or wavy, spirocheta, or the wavy thread may be looped and entwined on itself, spirulina. The term involution form is applied to certain peculiar shapes, which result more especially in bacteria grown under abnormal conditions. They are round, oval, pear-shaped, or club-formed enlargements. Movement.—Many bacteria are devoid of movement through- out the whole of their life history. Others, during certain stages of their life cycle, and possibly some forms always, are endowed with locomotive power. The character of the movement is very varied, and ranges from a slow undulatory motion to one of extreme rapidity. Many appear to progress in a definite direction. Others move continuously, first in one direction and then in another, and others again seem to hesitate before altering their course. They may either glide along smoothly or progress with a tremulous motion. Fic. 2.—SprrocH£TA FROM SEWAGE WaTER, x 1200. They appear to be able to avoid obstacles, and to set themselves free from objects with which they have accidentally come into contact. Vibrios have a peculiar serpentine movement, but other forms, such as the commonly known Bacterium termo and segments of spirilla, such as comma-bacilli, revolve around their long axis as well as make distinct progression. The complete spirilla are characterised by the familiar corkscrew movement. With regard to cocci there is some doubt as to whether they are endowed with independent movement, any quivering or oscillation being generally regarded as only Brownian or molecular. In some straight thread- forms, which are motile, the movement is very slow and vermicular in character, but in wavy threads, such as the Spirocheta plicatilis, there is not only an undulatory motion, with rapid progression across the field of the microscope, but if they are confined by more or less débris, they give very peculiar and characteristic spasmodic. movements. (Fig. 2.) The rod-forms of Proteus vulgaris exhibit very extraordinary 16 BACTERIOLOGY. movements on the surface of solid nutrient gelatine. Groups of rods may be observed to pass each other in opposite directions, Single individuals meet and progress side by side, or one or more individuals may part from a group and glide away independently, Occasionally a number of rods progress in single file. It is, however, difficult to believe that these movements can occur on a solid surface. Fig. 3.—FLAGELLA. 1. Coccus with flagellum. 2. Similar coccus dividing, with two flagella. 3. Colony of flagellated macrococci of Beggiatoa rosco-persicina. 4, Short rod from the same Beggiatoa with flagella [all after Zopf]. 5. Bacillus with flagella [from a photograph by Koch]. 6. Bacillus subtilis |after Brefeld]. 7, 8. Short rod- forms of Beygiatoa roseo-persicina with one flagellum [after Zopf]. 9. Very long rod of the same, with flagellum at both ends [after Warming]. 10. Vibrio, with double flagellum at each end [after Warming]. 11. Vibrio, with flagella [from a photograph by the author]. 12. Spirillum with flagella [from a photo- graph by Koch]. 13. Spirillum with flagella [after Zopf]. 14. Spirillum with double flagella [after Zopf]. 15. Beygiatow roseo-persicina, with a triple flagellum at one end; and 16, with a double flagellum at both ends [after Warming]. The author is inclined to believe that there is an almost inappreciable layer of liquid on the surface of the gelatine, which is expressed after the gelatine sets. In tubes of nutrient agar-agar gelatinised obliquely and then kept upright the liquid so expressed collects at the bottom of the sloping surface. MORPHOLOGY AND PHYSIOLOGY OF BACTERIA. 17 The means by which bacteria are endowed with the power of spontaneous movement and of progression may still be said, in some cases, to be unsettled. The author has watched the move- ment of long slender threads in sewage-contaminated water, which could only be explained by the inherent contractility of the proto- plasmic contents; for if any drawing or propelling organ existed in proportion to the length of the organism, it would probably have been visible. But in many cases the organism is provided with a vibratile lash or flagellum at one end, or with one or more at both ends, or with numerous lateral and terminal flagella. Some observers believe that the movement of cocci is due to the Fic. 4.—BacILLus MEGATHERIUM. a. A chain of rods, x 250. The rest x 600. b. Two active rods. d to f. Successive stages of spate. -formation. h tom. Successive stages of germination. [After De Bary.] existence of a flagellum. In Bacterium termo the existence of a lash at either end was first determined by the researches of Dallinger and Drysdale. In motile bacilli, such as the hay bacillus and Bacillus ulna, and in vibrios and spirilla, the flagella can be readily recognised by expert microscopists with the employment of the best lenses, and, what is of equal importance, proper illumination. They are objects of extreme delicacy and tenuity, and in stained prepara- tions may be absent from retraction or injury. Koch succeeded in photographing them after staining with logwood, which turned them a brown colour. The author has observed them in vibrios in preparations stained with gentian violet, from which also they have been photographed, in spite of the violet colour, by the use of 2 18 BACTERIOLOGY, isochromatic dry plates, and more recently special methods have been introduced, by Léffler and others, by which they can be stained and photographed with comparative facility. It is not certain whether the flagella are extensions of the cell- wall, or derived from the internal protoplasm. Van Tieghem holds the first view, and does not regard them as motile organs at all. Zopf, on the other hand, adheres to the second view, aud moreover believes that they can be retracted within the cell-wall. Reproduction.—Bacteria multiply by fission and by processes which may be considered as representing fructification. The Fic. 5.—CLosTRIDIUM BUTYRICUM, x 1020. B. Stages of spore-formation. C. Stages of germination. ‘[After Prazmowski.] bacteria exhibiting the latter processes have been divided into two groups, distinguished by the formation of endospores in the one and of arthrospores in the other. In the process of fission the cell first increases in size, and a transverse septum forms from the cell-wall, dividing the internal protoplasm into two equal parts; these may separate and lead an independent existence, or remain linked together. In chains of cocci the individual cells are easily visible and distinct, but in the thread-forms resulting from the linking together of rods, as in the anthrax bacillus, the composition of the thread is only demonstrated by the action of reagents. Endospore formation may be conveniently studied in Bacillus anthracis, Bacillus megatherium, or Bacillus subtilis. The proto- MORPHOLOGY AND PHYSIOLOGY OF BACTERIA. 19 plasm becomes granular, and at certain points in the thread a speck appears, which gradually enlarges and develops into a circular or egg-shaped, sharply defined, highly refractive body. The spore grows at the expense of the protoplasm of the cell, which in time, together with the cell-wall, entirely disappears, and the spore is set free. These phenomena are best seen in an immotile bacillus in a drop-cultivation on a warm stage; the whole process may then be observed continuously from beginning to end. Spores may form in each link of the thread, so that a regular row results, or they may occur at irregular intervals. Spore-formation also occurs in bacilli which do not develop into leptothrix filaments. The spores may develop in the centre or at one end of the rod. In the tetanus bacillus a spore develops at the extreme end, producing the appear- ance of a drum-stick. The spore may be considerably wider, but is never longer than the parent cell. Fic. 6.—LEUcONOSTOC MESENTEROIDES ; COCCI-CHAINS WITH ARTHROSPORES (after Van Tieghem and Cienkowski). Arthrospore formation is illustrated in Leuconostoc mesenteroides. Certain elements in the chain of cocci, apparently not differing from the rest, become larger, with tougher walls, and more refractive. The remaining cells die, and these cells having acquired the pro- perties of spores are set free, and can reproduce a new growth in any fresh nourishing soil. That this occurs in all species which do not form endospores is at present only a supposition. Spores are invested by a thick membrane, which is believed to consist of two layers. To this they probably owe the property they possess of retaining vitality when desiccated, and of offering a greater resistance to the action of chemical reagents and heat than the parent cells. \ Spore-formation has been regarded by some as occurring when the nourishing soil is exhausted, thus providing for the perpetuation ’ 20 BACTERIOLOGY. of the species. In anthrax the bacilli do not form spores in the living body, but when the animal dies the development of spores takes place, and hence the danger of contaminating the soil if the body is disposed of by burial. Klein, however, has pointed out that if mice and guinea-pigs which have died of anthrax are kept un- opened, the bacilli simply degenerate and ultimately disappear. Thus there is good reason for believing that spore-formation is not due to exhaustion of the pabulum, but probably free access to oxygen constitutes an important factor in inducing this condition. If we inoculate a potato with anthrax, copious spore-formation oceurs, though we cannot consider that the nourishing soil has been exhausted. But we have in this case the surface of the potato freely exposed to the air in the damp chamber. In the same way, in cultivations on agar-agar solidified obliquely (so as to get a large surface), spore-formation readily takes place. Contamination of Fic. 7.—SPoRE-BEARING THREADS oF Bacittus ANTHRACIS, DouBLE- SEINE: WITH FUCHSINE AND METHYLENE BLUE, x 1200. the ground results, therefore, from animals in which a ae examination has been made and the blood and organs freely exposed to the air; or from carcasses the hides of which have been soiled with excretions, and with blood which issues from the mouth and nostrils before death. When spores are introducéd into a suitable medium at a favour- able temperature they develop again into rods. The spore loses its. sharp contour, and, at one pole or on one side, a pale précess bursts through the membrane, gradually growing into a rod from which the empty capsule is thrown off. Spores differ from the parent cells in their behaviour to staining reagents. Like them, they can be stained with aniline dyes, but not by the ordinary processes. They require to be specially treated. This is probably due to the tough capsule, which must be altered or softened by heat or strong acid, until it allows the stain to penetrate. MORPHOLOGY AND PHYSIOLOGY OF BACTERIA. 21 Once stained, they again differ from the parent cells in resisting decolorisation ; this fact is taken advantage of to double-stain spore- bearing bacilli (Fig. 7). In staining micro-organisms, the protoplasm is sometimes broken up into irregular segments or granules, as in many spirilla, and we may add the bacilli of tuberculosis and leprosy. The beaded appearance of the tubercle bacillus is well known. Some observers have regarded the beads, others the bright spaces -between them, as spores. But spores in unstained preparations appear as glistening bodies with sharp contour. They do not stain at all, or very little, by the ordinary processes. These considerations led the author to stain and examine tubercular sputum and pure-cultures under careful illumination, and with such lenses as Powell and Lealand’s gs in.hom,imm. The tubercle bacillus in sputum (Fig. 8), as a rule, ! Fic. 8.—BactLur or TUBERCLE In SPuTuM, x 2500 (from photographs). consists of a very delicate sheath, holding together a number of deeply stained granules, for the most part round or cylindrical, with irregular contour, and differing considerably in size, while the light interspaces are seen to vary in form according to the shape of the granules, On the other hand, particularly in old cultures, more or less spherical, sharply defined bodies are observed in the bacilli, and also set free. These are the true spores of the tubercle bacillus, ~ and are quite distinct from the irregular granules. There can be no doubt that a tubercle bacillus consists of a very delicate sheath, with protoplasmic contents which have a great tendency to break up or coagulate into little segments or roundish granules, partly owing to their age and the conditions under which they are grown, and partly to the treatment they are subjected to in making a microscopical preparation. This does not always occur, for the bacilli at times are not beaded, but are stained in their entirety. Tn the leprosy bacilli a similar appearance occurs. In stained 22 BACTERIOLOGY. sections the rods have a beaded appearance, but the intervals between the granules are sometimes very long, and occasionally the protoplasm appears to have collected only at the extreme ends of the rod. The appearances in the case of the bacillus of glanders and the bacillus of hemorrhagic septicemia may be similarly explained. The fact that tubercular sputum preserves its virulence for several months, even after desiccation, is to be attributed to the formation of spores. Babés claims to have succeeded in differen- tiating them by double staining. In his definition of spirilla, Zopf gives the spore-formation as absent or unknown. In comma-bacilli in sewage water the author has often noted appearances suggestive of refractive spores; and the same also may be observed in vibrios, differing by their regular contour from the irregular spaces occasionally observed in stained preparations; but they are only vacuoles. + gd a 2, es Fic. 9.—ComMa-BAcILLI In SEw- Fic. 10. Visrios In WATER CON- AGE WATER, STAINED WITH TAMINATED WITH SEWAGE, GENTIAN VIOLET, x 1200. x 1200. Respiration and Nutrition.—Like all a-chlorophyllous vegeta- - bles, bacteria require for their nutrition oxygen, nitrogen, carbon, water, and certain mineral salts. Many require free access to oxygen, others can derive it from the oxidised compounds in the medium in which they grow. Pasteur divided bacteria into two great classes —the aerobic and anaerobic, and considered that the latter not only had no need of oxygen, but that its presence was actually deleterious. Though this view must be considerably modified, the terms are convenient, and are still retained. They are well illus- trated by the bacillus of anthrax, and the bacillus of malignant edema; anda simple plan of demonstration has been employed by the author. A fragment of tissue from the spleen, for example, known to contain anthrax bacilli, is deposited with a sterilised inoculating needle, with the necessary precautions, on the surface of nutrient agar-agar in a test-tube ; another tube of nutrient agar- agar is liquefied, and when cooled down almost to the point of MORPHOLOGY AND PHYSIOLOGY OF BACTERIA. 23 gelatinisation, a part is poured into the first tube, so that when it sets the piece of tissue is completely embedded. A piece of tissue from an animal suffering from malignant cedema is treated in the same way, and the tubes are placed in the incubator. If we examine them after two or three days, we shall find no change in the anthrax tube; the bacillus being eminently aerobic, no growth whatever has occurred. In the tube containing the bacilli of malignant cedema there will be a more or less characteristic cultivation. The nitrogen which is essential for building up their protoplasm can be obtained either from albumins, or from ammonia and its derivatives. That the albumins can be dispensed with was shown by Pasteur, who employed an artificial nourishing solution consti- tuted upon a formula representing the essential food constituents. Carbon is derived from such substances as cane sugar, milk sugar, and glycerine, and, in some cases, by the splitting up of complex proteid bodies. Water is essential for their growth, but deprivation of water does not kill all bacteria. Desiccation on potato is employed for preserving some micro-organisms, as a new growth can be started, when required, by transferring some of the dried potato to fresh nourishing ground. Comma-bacilli, on the other hand, are destroyed by drying. Sugar is used in making preserves, because by abstracting water it prevents the development of micro- organisms. Mineral or inorganic substances, such as compounds of sodium and potassium, and different phosphates and sulphates, are necessary in small proportions. CIRCUMSTANCES AFFECTING THE GROWTH OF BacTERIA. Nature of the Soil—_Though we know the elements necessary, we are, nevertheless, as yet unable to provide a pabulum suitable for all kinds of bacteria. Thus we are quite unable to cultivate some species artificially. Others will only grow upon special media. Many grow upon nutrient gelatine; but some species only if it be acid or alkaline respectively. Whether in the latter case this is due purely to the reaction or to the presence of the particular ingredients is an unsettled point. Though the comma-bacillus of Koch, like the majority of organisms, grows best on an alkaline medium, yet it is well known to flourish at the temperature of the blood on the surface of potato, which is acid. 24 BACTERIOLOGY. Temperature.—The influence of temperature on bacteria will be found to vary according to the species, but still for the majority we may distinguish a maximum, optimum, and minimum temperature. Many grow best at the temperature of the blood, and hence the value of nutrient agar-agar, which is not liquefied at 37° C. The tubercle bacillus will only grow satisfactorily at a temperature varying between 30° C. and 41°C. On the other hand, many forms grow between the limits of 5° C. and 45°C. At these temperatures their functional activity is paralysed, but they are not destroyed, for by removal to favourable conditions they spring again into life. Bacteria seem to have a special power of resisting the effects of cold. It has been stated that comma-bacilli exposed to a temperature of—10° C. for an hour, and bacilli of anthrax after exposure to a temperature of —110° C., still retained their vitality. Temperatures over 50° to 60° C. destroy most bacteria, but not their spores; spores of anthrax retain their vitality after immersion in boiling water, but are destroyed by prolonged boiling. Roughly speaking, all patho- genic bacteria grow best at the temperature of the blood, and non-pathogenic bacteria at the ordinary temperature of the room. Movement.—Bacteria probably grow best when left undisturbed. Violent agitation of a vessel in which they are growing certainly retards their growth, but a steady movement is stated not to affect it; at any rate, anthrax bacilli grow with enormous rapidity in the blood-vessels, in spite of the circulation. Compressed Air.—Paul Bert maintained that a pressure of twenty-three to twenty-four atmospheres stopped all development of putrefactive bacteria. Oxygen, under a pressure of five or six atmospheres, is stated to stop their growth. Other observers have, however, obtained different results, Gases.—Hydrogen and carbonic acid are stated to stop the movements of the motile bacteria. Chloroform is believed to arrest the changes brought about by the zymogenic species. Electricity—Cohn and Mendelssohn found that a constant galvanic current produced a deleterious effect owing to electrolysis. At the positive pole the liquid became distinctly acid, and at the negative pole distinctly alkaline. With a weak current there appeared to be no effect, two powerful cells at the very least being necessary. Light.—Downes has shown that sunlight is fatal to putrefactive bacteria. This is believed to be due to a process of induced hyper- oxidation, from which living organisms ordinarily are shielded by protective developments of the cell-wall, or of colouring-matter, — MORPHOLOGY AND PHYSIOLOGY OF BACTERIA. 25 which cut off injurious rays. Duclaux has investigated the same subject, and observed that micrococci were more sensitive to sun- light than the spore-bearing bacilli. Engelmann has described a bacterium whose movements cease in the dark, and Zopf states that in his cultures of Beggiatoa roseo-persicina the growth was much more strongly developed on the side of the vessel facing the light. Arloing, Marshall Ward, and Dieudonné have studied the effect of the sun’s rays on anthrax spores, and on chromogenic and other bacteria, and maintain that they are bactericidal. The effect is due chiefly, if not entirely, to the blue rays.- Chemical Reagents.—Many substances, such as carbolic acid, corrosive sublimate, chlorine, bromine, have a marked effect upon the growth of bacteria. This will be more fully described in another chapter. In several cases the bacteria themselves secrete a substance which is injurious to their future development. : Propucts oF GROWTH. Bacteria may be grouped together according to the changes pro- duced in the media in which they grow. Thus we have pigment- forming, phosphorescent, fermentative, putrefactive, nitrifying, and disease-producing bacteria. Chromogenic or pigment-forming bacteria elaborate during their growth definite colour stuffs. Such species are exemplified by Bacillus violaceus, which produces a striking purple growth; Bacillus pyocyaneus, which secretes pyocyanin, a substance which has been isolated and obtained in a crystalline form ; Micrococcus prodigiosus, which produces a pigment allied to fuchsine; Beggiatoa roseo-per- sicina, which is characterised by the presence of bacterio-purpurin ; Sarcina lutea, Bacillus cyanogenus, and many others. Photogenic, or light-producing, bacteria are found more especially in sea-water. There are several species of phosphorescent bacilli, and according to Beyrinck the best medium for their cultivation is fish-broth made with sea-water. Photographs can be obtained of cultures by their own light. Zymogenic or ferment bacteria produce their changes in non- nitrogenised media. Bacterium aceti, by its growth produces the acetic fermentation in wine by which alcohol taking up atmospheric oxygen is converted into vinegar :— C7H5O + 0? = C’H'0? + H70. The fermentation of urine, by which urea is converted into carbonate of ammonia, can be brought about by several micro-organisms, but 26 BACTERIOLOGY. notably by the Hated ure, The change produced is represented by the following formula :— °0 = (NH) 200°, co(NE + 2120 = (NH) Clostridium butyricum converts the salts of lactic acid into butyric acid, producing the butyric fermentation in solutions of starch, dextrine, and sugar. These bacteria are agents in the ripening of cheese, and the production of sauerkraut.. Thus, in a solution neutralised with calcium carbonate :— 2[Ca(C*H50")'] + H20 = Ca(C!H70%)? + CaCO* + 300? + He. In the so-called viscous fermentation of wines, Streptococcus viscosus produces a gummy substance. According to Pasteur, the change may be thus represented :— 25(C"H™0") + 25(H20) = 12(C"H”0") + 24(C°HO%) + 12(CO2) + 12(H20). And as another example, the Bacillus acidi lactici may be mentioned, through the agency of which sugar of milk is converted into lactic acid :— CR AAO = 4(C%H'0*). Saprogenic or putrefactive bacteria play a most important part in the economy of nature. They produce changes allied to fermenta- tion in complex organic substances, Their action on proteids, according to Hoppe-Seyler, may be compared to digestion ; bodies like peptones are first produced, then leucin, tyrosin, and fatty acids ; lastly indol, phenol, sulphuretted hydrogen, ammonia, carbonic acid, and water. They abstract the elements they require, and the remainder enter into new combinations. Associated with the forma- tion of these substances are certain bodies which have a poisonous effect when introduced into animals. These poisonous alkaloids, ptomaines, produce a septic poisoning, which must be distinguished from septic infection. The effects of septic poisoning depend on the dose, whereas the effects of septic infection are, to a certain extent, independent of the dose. A small quantity of a septic poison may produce only transient effects, and a relatively large quantity may be necessary to produce vomiting, rigors, and death. Septic in- fection, on the other hand, may result equally from a small dose, because the poison introduced is a living organism which is capable of propagation and multiplication. Our knowledge of these alkaloids is largely attributable to the researches of Selmi, Gautier, and Brieger, and the result of their work will be referred to again, MORPHOLOGY AND PHYSIOLOGY OF BACTERIA. 27 Nitrifying bacteria play a very important part by providing plant life with a most necessary food. They occur in the soil, and two kinds have been described—the one kind converting ammonia into nitrous acid, and the other changing nitrous into nitric acid. To Winogradsky and Frankland we are principally indebted for our knowledge of these bacteria. Pathogenic bacteria are those which are genetically related to disease. Many organisms have been supposed to be pathogenic, or have been described in connection with diseases, which are only saprophytic associates. By saprophytic we mean organisms which feed upon dead organic matter. They include many forms which are found on the skin, in the intestinal canal, and sometimes in the internal organs, especially the liver and kidneys; the tissues have lost their vitality, and the organisms, through some lesion, have been carried into the circulation. That many organisms are causally related to disease, there is strong evidence in proof. No organism can be considered to be pro- ductive of disease unless it fulfils the conditions which have been laid down by Koch. Great stress must be laid upon the importance of successive cultivation through many generations, as the objection that a chemical virus may be carried over from the original source is thus overcome. Any hypothetical chemical poison carried over from one tube to another would, after a great number of such cultivations, be diluted to such an extent as to be inappreciable and absolutely inert. Though we may accept as a fact the existence of pathogenic organisms, we are not in all cases in a position to assert the means by which they produce their deleterious or fatal effects, Many theories have been propounded. It has been suggested that the pathogenic organisms may be compared to an invading army. The cells or phagocytes arrayed against them endeavour to as- similate and destroy them, but perish themselves in the attempt. This might explain the breaking down of tissue, and the for- mation of local lesions, but does not assist us in understanding the fatal result in thirty-six to forty-eight hours produced by the inoculation of the bacilli of anthrax. Another view is that the invading army seizes upon the commissariat, appropriating the general pabulum, which is so essential to the life of the tissues. This would hardly account for so acute and fatal a result as in anthrax, but would lead one to expect symptoms of inanition and gradual exhaustion. Moreover, against this theory we have the fact that death may result, in some cases, with the presence 28 BACTERIOLOGY. of comparatively few bacilli in the blood; and, again, the blood may teem with parasites such as the flagellated monads in well-nourished, healthy-looking rats, without, apparently causing any symptoms whatever. In the same category may be placed the theory that eminently aerobic organisms seize upon the oxygen of the blood and produce death by asphyxia. Another explanation is afforded by the suggestion of interference with the functions of the lung and kidney by mechanical blocking of the capillaries. Here the same objection is met with in the case of anthrax, the same fatal result may occur with only a few bacilli, while other cases yield very beautiful sections, looking like injected preparations from the mapping out of the capillaries with the countless crowds of bacilli. Putrefactive bacteria derive their necessary elements from com- plex organic substances, and accompanying the residue we find the presence of poisonous substances. Pathogenic bacteria, in a similar way, give rise to virulent poisons. Anthrax bacilli produce poisonous principles in the blood which cause death, independently of the number of bacilli, provided there are sufficient present to develop a fatal dose. It has been also suggested that possibly a special ferment is secreted by some organisms, and that by the changes ultimately wrought by the action of this ferment the symptoms and phe- nomena of disease arise. We have an analogy with this theory in the alkaline fermentation of urine by means of the torula urex. By the researches of Musculus, and later of Sheridan Lea, it has been shown that a ferment is secreted by the cells which can be isolated in aqueous solution, and is capable of rapidly inducing an active fermentation of urea. We can now understand how it is that in anthrax or in tuber- culosis we may find the presence of only a few bacilli, or that in tetanus we can have such a violent disturbance of the system produced by the presence of very few micro-organisms. We may conceive that different species of bacilli may vary greatly in their power of producing a toxin or secreting a-ferment, just as the elaboration of pigment is much more marked in some species than in others; thus it need not follow that the number of micro- organisms bears any relation to the virulence or activity of the substance they produce. There is, however, yet another factor in the production of disease. We know that in health we are proof against most of these micro-organisms ; if it were not so, we should all rapidly fall victims to the tubercle bacillus or others, which in MORPHOLOGY AND PHYSIOLOGY OF BACTERIA. 29 health we inhale with impunity. We know that a microbe may only cause a local lesion in one animal, but death in another. It is still more striking that the same micro-organism, as is the case with anthrax, may have no effect whatever upon certain species of animals, though it is deadly to others. Again, an animal naturally susceptible to the effect of a pathogenic organism may be rendered proof against it. These matters will be discussed in a future. chapter. DistriButTION OF BACTERIA. Bacteria are commonly described as ubiquitous. They are ever present in the air, though not in such exaggerated numbers as is commonly supposed. In nutrient media exposed to the air one is often astonished at times at the comparatively few bacteria which develop in comparison to the amount of floating matter, such as mineral particles, scales, spores of fungi and débris known to be present. In water they are also present in considerable numbers, though of course varying according to the character of the water. Wherever there is putrefaction, they are present in vast numbers. In the soil, in sewage, in the intestines and, in uncleanly persons especially, on the skin and between the teeth, various species may always he found, but in the healthy blood and healthy tissues bacteria are never present. Ina previous chapter the method of examining the blood of living persons has been described, and there is, by this means, ample opportunity for satisfying oneself that bacteria are never to be found in the blood in health. The organs removed from a perfectly healthy animal, with the necessary precautions, and placed in sterilised media, can be kept indefinitely without undergoing putrefaction, or giving any development of bacteria. This has been established by many observers, notably Cheyne and Hauser; and the results of former observers to the contrary must be attributed to imperfect methods admitting of accidental contamination. 1 CHAPTER III. EFFECT OF ANTISEPTICS AND DISINFECTANTS ON BACTERIA. fn the previous chapter several conditions were alluded to which affected the growth of bacteria, such as the nature of the nutrient soil, temperature, light, and electricity. The effect of certain chemical substances, and of excessive heat and cold, was also mentioned; but this constitutes a subject of such practical importance that it must be considered more fully. a Agents which retard the growth of bacteria are generally spoken of as antiseptics, as distinguished from disinfectants which altogether destroy their vitality. Though chemical disinfectants, or germicides, when diluted, act as efficient antiseptics, the converse, that an antiseptic in a suffi- ciently concentrated form will act asa disinfectant, is not the case. The term ‘ antiseptic,” indeed, should be restricted to those sub- stances or agents which arrest the changes bacteria produce, but which do not prevent their springing into activity when removed to favourable conditions. Thus excessive heat, which destroys bacteria and their spores, is a true disinfectant ; and excessive cold, which only benumbs them, retarding their development without killing them, is an antiseptic. Spores have a greater power of resisting the action of these various agents than the parent cells, and many species of micro- organisms differ from each other in their resisting power. Au exact knowledge of the subject can, therefore, only be based upon investigations which will determine the effect of these agents upon pure cultivations of the different micro-organisms causally related to putrefaction and disease. In the latter case, especially, this is not possible in the present state of our knowledge. In some cases of communicable disease there is considerable doubt as to the etiological importance of the organisms which have been described; in other cases no organisms have as yet been discovered, or the organisms 30 EFFECT OF ANTISEPTICS AND DISINFECTANTS ON BACTERIA, 31 cannot be artificially cultivated, or the disease is not reproduced by inoculation, so that there is no means of testing whether the agents have had any effect. One can, therefore, only draw general conclusions by selecting some well-known pathogenic and non- pathogenic micro-organisms, and considering the influence of chemicals, of hot air and of steam upon them, as representing the effect upon the various contagia of disease and the causes of putrefaction. Such knowledge must necessarily prove of the greatest im- portance: to the sanitarian, who is concerned in preventing the spreading of disease and in the disposal of putrefactive matter; to the surgeon, who is anxious to exclude micro-organisms during surgical operations, and to arrest the development of bacteria which have already gained an entrance in wounds; to the physician, in the treatment of micro-parasitic diseases. The sanitarian and the surgeon must profit directly by such experiments, for in the disinfection of clothes and the sick-room by the one, and in the application of antiseptic dressings and lotions by the other, the micro-organisms are encountered, as in the experi- ments, outside the living body. The physician, on the other hand, is principally concerned in _ dealing with micro-parasites when circulating in the blood, or carrying on their destructive processes in the internal tissues. So far as our knowledge at present goes, the physician can avail him- self but little of the effect of the direct application of the substances which have been found to retard or destroy the growth of the organisms in artificial cultivations, for the concentrated form. in which they would have to be administered would prove as deleteri- ous or as fatal to the host as to the parasites. Thus Koch has stated that to check the growth of the anthrax bacillus in man it would be necegsary that there should be twelve grammes of iodine constantly in circulation, and that the dose of quinine necessary to destroy the spirilla of relapsing fever would be from twelve to sixteen grammes. The retarding influence, however, of certain substances when diluted, and the fact that disinfectants are some- times equally efficacious in a diluted form when their application is prolonged, seem to indicate measures which may be adopted, in some cases, with chances of success, such as the inhalation of antiseptic vapours in phthisis. For the most part the physician must look rather to combating the effects of micro-organisms by restoring to its normal standard the lowered vitality which enabled the bacteria to get a footing. 32 BACTERIOLOGY. There is no wider field for research than the determination of the real effect of disinfectants and antiseptics. Painstaking and laborious as the researches are which have been hitherto made, the subject is so beset with fallacies, leading, in some cases, to totally. erroneous conclusions, that it is not surprising that one meets on all sides with conflicting statements. The author has no intention of analysing these results, but a general idea will be given of the methods which have been employed, and for further details reference must be made to the original papers mentioned in the bibliography. Chemical Substances.—It was customary to judge of the power of a disinfectant or antiseptic by adding it to some putrescent liquid. A small portion of the latter was, after a time, transferred to some suitable nourishing medium, and the efficacy of the substance estimated by the absence of cloudiness, odour, or other sign of development of bacteria in the inoculated fluid. Koch pointed out. the errors that might arise in these experiments from accidental contamination, or from there being no evidence of the destruction of spores, and we are indebted to him for a complete and careful series of observations with more exact methods. Instead of employing a mixture of bacteria, Koch’s plan was to subject a pure cultivation of some well-known species with marked characteristics to the reagent to be tested. A small quantity was _ then transferred to fresh nourishing soil, under favourable con- ditions, side by side with nutrient material inoculated from a cultivation without treatment with the disinfectant. The latter constituted a control test, whichis most essential in all such experiments. To test the resistant power of bacteria which are easily destroyed, two species were selected, Micrococcus prodigiosus, and the bacillus of blue pus. These were cultivated on potatoes, the surfaces of which were sliced off and dried. A fragment trans- ferred to freshly prepared potato gave rise to a growth of the particular micro-organism ; but if after treatment with some reagent no growth occurred, the conclusion was drawn that the reagent was efficacious in destroying the vitality of the bacteria. Anthrax bacilli in blood, withdrawn from an animal just killed, were taken to represent sporeless bacteria, while silk threads steeped in an artificial cultivation of the bacilli and dried, afforded a means of testing the vitality of spores. Even by employing pure cultivations on solid media, great precautions were necessary to avoid mistakes. When, for instance, a large quantity of the growth which had been subjected to some chemical solution was carried over to the fresh tube containing EFFECT OF ANTISEPTICS AND DISINFECTANTS ON BACTERIA. 33 the nutrient medium, or when a silk thread, which had been dipped in a solution, was directly transferred to the new soil, enough of the supposed disinfectant might be mechanically carried over to retard the development of the bacteria, though it was ineffectual in destroying them. From a growth not appearing, it was concluded that the spores or the bacteria had been affected, and so a mistake occurred. To avoid this, Koch made a point of transfer- ring a minimum of the disinfected growth to as large a cultivation area as possible, so that any chemical substance mechanically carried over would be so diluted as to be inert. For the same reason, threads, after withdrawal from the disinfecting solution, were rinsed in sterilised water, or weak alcohol, and then trans- planted ; or, instead of judging from. the development on nutrient gelatine, the effect of inoculation in a healthy animal was made the test. A few examples may be quoted in illustration. Silk threads, impregnated with anthrax spores, were placed in bottles containing carbolic acid of various strengths. A thread was removed from each on successive days, and transferred to nutrient gelatine, and the result noted. Jt was found that immersion of the thread in a 5 per cent. solution of carbolic acid was sufficient in two days to effect complete sterilisation, and seven days in a 3 per cent. solution was equally efficacious. Since for practical purposes a strength should be selected which would be effectual in twenty-four hours, Koch recommended that for general use, allowing for deterioration by ‘keeping, a solution containing not less than 5 per cent. should be employed, and for complex fluids probably a still higher percentage would be necessary. In the case of sporeless bacilli the results were very different. Blood containing the bacilli, from an animal just killed, was dried on threads, and after exposure for two minutes to a 1 per cent. solution, was completely sterilised; and fresh blood mixed with a 1 per cent. carbolic solution produced no effect when inoculated. On the other hand, when the blood was mixed with a ‘D per cent. solution, the virulence was not destroyed. The facility with which the bacilli are destroyed, compared with their spores, illustrates how easily errors may occur, when mere arrest of growth or loss of motility is regarded as a sign of the efficacy of disinfection. To test vapours, Koch exposed anthrax spores or the spores which occur in garden earth by suspending them over solutions, such as bromine or chlorine, in a closed vessel. After a time they were transferred to a nutrient medium to test their vitality. To test the power of sulphurous acid gas, the spores were spread about 3 34 BACTERIOLOGY. in a room in which the gas was generated by burning sulphur in the ordinary way for disinfecting a room. To test chemicals which inight be recommended for disinfecting vans and railway carriages, spores were laid on boards, which were then washed or sprayed, and the spores then transferred to the nutrient gelatine. Sternberg has also made an elaborate series of experiments with regard to the action of germicides. In this case cultivations of. well-known pathogenic organisms in liquid media were employed. The supposed germicide was added to the liquid cultivation, and after two hours a fresh flask of sterilised culture was inoculated from the disinfected cultivation, and placed in the incubator, In twenty- four to forty-eight hours, if the chemical proved inefficient, there was evidence of a growth of bacteria. Blyth has investigated the disinfection of cultivations of Bacterium termo, of sewage, and typhoid excreta, and, in conjunction with Klein, the effect of well- known disinfectant materials on anthrax spores. Miquel, Laws, and others have also contributed to our knowledge of the. effect of antiseptics and disinfectants upon micro-organisms. In spite of all that has been done there is room for many workers; a great deal of ground must be gone over again to rectify discrepancies, examine conflicting results, and thus determine what observations may be relied upon for practical application. This may be illustrated by referring in detail to some experiments made with corrosive sublimate. Koch investigated a long list of chemical reagents, and according to these experiments the salts of mercury, and the chloride especially, proved most valuable. Where heat is not admissible, these compounds were therefore highly recommended, though their poisonous nature is a drawback to their indiscriminate use. Koch stated that for disinfecting a ship’s bilge, where a 5 per cent. solution of carbolic acid must be left forty-eight hours, a 1 in 1000 solution of mercurie chloride would only require a few minutes. But there was good reason for doubting the efficacy of very dilute solutions; for, though according to Koch’s experiments anthrax spores subjected to a 1 in 20,000 solution of mercuric chloride for ten minutes, and then washed in alcohol, gave no growth in nutrient gelatine, silk threads exposed for ten minutes to a 1 in 20,000 solution, or even 1 in 10,000, still proved fatal to mice. Herroun cultivated ordinary septic bacteria in albuminous filtrates, containing .1 in 2000, and concluded that the value of mercuric chloride as an antiseptic was much over-rated. It is pre- cipitated by albumins though, as Lister has shown, the precipitate EFFECT OF ANTISEPTICS AND DISINFECTANTS ON BACTERIA. 39 of albuminate of mercury is redissolved when there is an excess of albumin present. Geppert, and later Behring, recognised that the methods employed for testing the efficacy of corrosive sublimate were unreliable. They found, for example, that corrosive sublimate could not be removed from silk threads by washing; and therefore to study the effect of this antiseptic acting for a given time, it was necessary to dip the threads in ammonium sulphide solution after the treatment with corrosive sublimate. The author confirmed the results of Geppert and Behring, and made a series of experiments to test the value respectively of carbolic acid and corrosive sublimate in antiseptic surgery. The method of dipping an infected thread into an antiseptic solution for a few uiinutes, and then transferring it to the surface of a nutrient medium to test its efficacy in a given time, was discarded as-fallacious; the thread being still wet with the solution when transferred to the medium, it was obvious that the action of the antiseptic continued for many days, To wash infected silk threads with alcohol after exposure to the antiseptic to stop its further action, also proved to be a fallacious method, for the author found in control experiments that absolute alcohol will destroy Streptococcus pyogenes, erysipelatis, and Staphylococcus pyogenes aureus, acting for only one minute. Other methods were therefore resorted to, and cultures on the sloping surface of nutrient agar were at first used. The antiseptic was poured into the culture tube until the growth was covered, and when it had acted for a definite time (one minute, five minutes, or fifteen minutes) a solution was added which immediately stopped further action. In the case of corrosive sublimate, ammonium sul- phide was employed, which is quite inert as anantiseptic. The liquid contents of the test tube were carefully poured off, and an inoculation was made into a fresh tube of broth or agar from the culture still adhering to the surface of the nutrient medium. As the results disproved the efficacy of corrosive sublimate, it was thought possible that the solution had not been able in the time to penetrate the film of growth, Another plan was accordingly adopted. Cultures were made in broth, and when fully developed the supernatant liquid was carefully poured off. Corrosive sublimate solution was added to the test. tube, and agitated until any flocculent masses were dis- integrated and the whole of the liquid became uniformly turbid. Ammonium sulphide was added when the time had expired, and tubes of fresh broth were inoculated with the mixture. In the case of carbolic acid the cultures, after its action, were thoroughly washed 36 BACTERIOLOGY. with water, and its efficacy tested by making inoculations from the cultures in fresh media. The results were entirely in favour of carbolic acid. Staphylococcus pyogenes aureus and Streptococcus pyogenes were not destroyed, even when corrosive sublimate solution of 1 in 1000 was allowed to act for an hour. In the case of the cultures of streptococcus of erysipelas the results were different. A solution of 1 in 10,000 had no effect, but 1 in 4,000, acting for one minute, destroyed the culture. With carbolic acid the results were very striking. Cultures were exposed to solutions of 1 in 20, 1 in 30, 1 in 40, 1 in 50, for one minute, five minutes, fifteen minutes. The attempts to make subcultures in every case failed. Carbolie acid 1 in 40, acting for only one minute, was sufficient to destroy Streptococcus pyogenes and Streptococcus erysipelatis and Staphylococcus pyogenes aureus. Further experiments were made with tubercular sputum, the test being subsequent inoculation of guinea-pigs. Corrosive sublimate solution as strong as 1 in 500 had no effect, but 1 in 20 carbolic acid, shaken up with the sputum for one minute, completely neutralised it. Koch’s statements with reference to the germicidal power of corrosive sublimate in extremely weak solutions had led Lister to substitute it for carbolic acid as a detergent in surgery. The author’s experiments, which were undertaken in 1892, encouraged Lister to revert to the use of carbolic acid, which, indeed, had always proved efficacious in surgical practice. Lister pointed out that carbolic acid has also the great advantage of combining eagerly with fats and epidermis, so that the seat of operation can be effectually cleansed. These experiments also point to the conclusion that carbolic acid should be used in hospital wards for the disinfection of tubercular sputum instead of mercuric chloride and other less efficacious dis- infectants commonly in use. Hot Air and Steam—Koch, in conjunction with Wolfhiigel, also made exhaustive experiments to test the value of hot air. A similar plan was adopted to that employed in disinfection with chemicals. Bacteria and spores were subjected for a certain time to a known temperature in the hot-air chamber, and then were transferred to a nourishing soil or inoculated in animals. Paper parcels, blankets, bags, and pillows, containing samples of micro-organisms wrapped up inside, were also placed in the hot-air chamber, to test the power of penetration of heat. The conclusions from these experiments were as follows :— Sporeless micro-organisms at a little over 100° GC. are destroyed in one hour and a half, EFFECT OF ANTISEPTICS AND. DISINFECTANTS ON BACTERIA. 37° Spores of bacilli require three hours at 140° C. If enclosed in pillows and blankets, exposure from three to four hours to 140° C. is necessary. Spores of fungi require one and a half hours at 110° 0. to 115° C. Further experiments showed that at the temperature necessary for the destruction of spores of bacilli almost all fabrics are more or less injured. Koch, in conjunction with Gaffky and Léffler, also investigated the effect of steam under pressure and at the atmospheric pressure. Rolls of flannel with anthrax spores or earth spores, and a thermometer wrapped up inside, were subjected to steam, and the results compared with the effect obtained with hot air. Thus in hot air four hours’ exposure to a temperature of 130° C. to 140° C. brought the temperature inside the roll to 85° C., and the spores were not injured; on the other hand, exposure to steam under pressure at 120° C. for one and a half hours, raised the internal temperature to 117° C. and killed the spores. By such experiments the superior penetrative power of steam- heat was established. To test steam-heat at the atmospheric pressure, water was boiled in a glass flask with its neck prolonged by means of a glass tube, the temperature in which was found to be uniform throughout. Anthrax and earth spores placed in the tube were found to be unable to with- stand steam at 100° C. even for a few minutes. It was, therefore, concluded that disinfection by steam at atmospheric pressure was superior to hot air from its greater efficiency, and to steam under pressure from the simplicity of the necessary apparatus. Parsons and Klein made some experiments which were more in favour of dry heat than the above. These observers state that anthrax bacilli are destroyed by an exposure of five minutes at from 100° C. to 103° C. and that anthrax spores are destroyed in four hours at 104° C., or in one hour at 118° C. Guinea-pigs inoculated with tuberculous pus which had been exposed for five ‘minutes to 104° C., remained unaffected. They concluded that as none of the infectious diseases, for which disinfecting measures are in practice commonly applied, are known to depend upon the presence of bacilli in a spore-b2aring condition, their contagia are not likely to retain their activity after being heated for an hour to 105° C. (220° Fahr.) In experiments with steam the results were in accordance with those already given, and complete penetration of an object 38 BACTERIOLOGY. by steam-heat for more than five minutes was deemed sufticient. They also arrived at the same result as in Koch’s experiments, viz., that steam-chambers are preferable to those in which dry heat is employed, though it must be borne in mind that some articles, such as leather, are injured by exposure to steam. PracticaL APPLICATION. Nurses and others attending infectious cases should freely use 1 in 40 carbolic for the hands and a weaker solution for the body generally, The skin of patients after recovery should be sponged with 1 in 40 carbolic. The dead should be wrapped up in a sheet soaked in 1 in 20 carbolic acid or a strong solution of chloride of lime. Infected clothing and bedding should be burnt unless in excep- tional cases, when they may be disinfected by boiling, or by exposure to dry heat at 105°C. to 110°C. for three hours, or by steaming at 100°C. for fifteen minutes. Leather and other articles which would be destroyed by any of these processes should be sponged with lin 40 carbolic. The walls of the sick-room and furniture should be exposed to the fumes of burning sulphur, and next day washed down with 1 in 40 carbolic, and the room freely ventilated by opening all windows and doors. Rags should be burnt, or dis- infected by boiling or exposure to steam when supplied to manu- facturers. _The importation of rags from places where there are eases of cholera or small-pox should be prohibited. Infected ships must be fumigated with sulphur, and the bilge disinfected with carbolic acid. Infected railway carriages should be disinfected in the same way as a sick-room. Tubercular sputum, cholera and typhoid evacuations and other excreta should be disinfected by 1 in 20 carbolic acid, or by a strong solution of chloride of lime. CHAPTER IV. CHEMICAL PRODUCTS OF BACTERIA. Tue products of the metabolism induced by bacteria may be divided into three classes : (1) ptomaines or alkaloids; (2) albumoses or tox- albumins ; and (3) enzymes, Alkaloids and albumoses are directly poisonous ; enzymes or ferments are harmless except in the presence of proteids, which they are capable of transforming into poisonous albumoses. ProMAInges AND Tox-ALBUMINS. The study of these products may be said to date back to 1822) when Gaspard and Stick found an intensely poisonous principle in cadaverous extracts. In 1856 Panum discovered « poisonous substance in putrid flesh; and in 1863 Bergmann and Smiedeberg found a nitrogenous crystallisable substance in putrid beer which they named sepsin. In 1872 Gautier found that the decomposition of fibrine led to the formation of various complex alkaloidal sub- stances, and in 1875 Richardson obtained in pyemia an alkaloid, septin. This subject, however, received most attention from the classical researches of Selmi, the Italian toxicologist. Selmi, in a celebrated poisoning case, demonstrated the presence of an alkaloid as the result of post-mortem changes. Similar substances were found in alcohol in which morbid specimens had been preserved. Thus the researches of Gautier and Selmi established the fact that albuminoid material undergoing decomposition leads to the forma- tion .of cadaveric alkaloids. These animal alkaloids Selmi named ptomaines. Brieger, finding the bases derived from the products of putrefaction less poisonous than those obtained from the pathogenic bacteria, suggested the term toxins for the latter. Ptomaines have been divided into two classes—those which are non-oxygenous, liquid, and volatile, and those which are oxygenous, solid, and crystallisable. They are, for the most part, precipitated by the ordinary reagents 39 40 BACTERIOLOGY. for alkaloids, such as chloride of gold, double iodide of mercury and potassium, picric acid, and tannin. Phospho-molybdie acid precipitates them without exception. They are powerful reducing agents. Ferro-cyanide of potassium is converted into ferri-cyanide in their presence, and the addition of ferric chloride gives the Prussian blue test. Selmi discovered this test, and Brouardel and Boutmy regarded it as absolutely characteristic of ptomaines ; but this is not the case; some vegetable alkaloids, for example, behave in the same way. As examples of the non-oxygenous ptomaines there are :— Parvolin (C9H¥N) an oily base of an amber colour prepared from putrid mackerel and horse-flesh. Hydrocollidin (C83H4*N), from the same source, It is highly toxic, being compared by Gautier to the venom of the cobra di capello. Collidin (C8HUN), from putrid gelatine and the pancreas of a bullock, also highly toxic. Neuridin (C@HN?), from fish, flesh, and decaying cheese. Saprin (C6HMN?), isomeric with neuridin. Cadaverin (CH™N?), a third isomeride, from ordinary putrefac- tion and herring brine. Putrescin (C4H2N?) from putrefaction. The oxygenous ptomaines are in some instances found also in healthy tissues. They include the following :— Newrin (C5H4NO), found in cadaveric putrefaction. Cholin (C*H5NO’), in bile. Muscarin (COHBNO?), in a poisonous mushroom, Agaricus mus- carius, and in putrid fish. These are all highly poisonous. Gadinin (CTHISNO?), in putrefying codfish. Mytilotoxin (COH™NO?), in poisonous mussels. Poisonous alkaloids are of great importance in connection with those cases of meat poisoning produced by sausages, hams, poultry, and cheese. Tyrotoxicon is a poisonous alkaloid obtained from cheese. The toxic substances of most interest to the bacteriologist are those isolated from pure cultivations of pathogenic bacteria, such as typhotoxin, isolated by Brieger from cultivations of the bacillus of typhoid fever, and tetanin, from cultivations of the tetanus bacillus ; and the poisons known as albumoses or tox-albumins, which are allied to the albumose of snake poison. Pasteur, in 1885, suggested that in anti-rabic inoculations the immunity resulted from the action of a substance secreted by a microbe, though the microbe has not as yet been discovered in rabies. Salmon produced immunity from hog cholera by the injec- CHEMICAL PRODUCTS OF BACTERIA. 4] tion of the toxic products in filtered culture fluids. Wooldridge, Hankin, and Martin studied the products of Bacillus anthracis. Charrin, and later Woodhead, Wood, and Blagovestchensky, investi- gated on these lines Bacillus pyocyaneus. Roux and Chamberland experimented with the bacillus of malignant edema; Roux with symptomatic anthrax; Chantemesse and Widal with the typhoid bacillus. Roux, Yersin, Brieger, Frankel, Martin, and Behring worked on the same lines with diphtheria. Koch introduced tuberculin, Kalning mallein, while others have utilised the products of streptococci and pneumococci. Anrep found an albumose in the medulla of rabid animals, and Babés claims to have found an albumose in both rabies and glanders. Cholera.—Brieger found several ptomaines, including putrescin and cadaverin, in pure cultures of the spirillum of Asiatic cholera, and Petri found in addition to poisonous bases a proteid body which produces in guinea-pigs muscular tremors, paralysis, and a rapidly fatal result. Roux and Yersin obtained from cultures a tox-albumin insoluble in water, which kills guinea-pigs in two or three days, but has no effect on rabbits. Pfeiffer also investigated the toxic substances in cultures. Chloroform, thymol, and drying destroyed comma-bacilli, leaving their toxic products unaffected. Concentrated solutions of neutral salts and boiling produced secondary toxic substances, but the original toxic substances were ten or twenty times more virulent. Typhoid Fever.—Typhotoxin (C7H!7NO?), the alkaloid ob- tained by Brieger from cultures of the typhoid fever bacillus, produces in mice and guinea-pigs salivation, rapid breathing, dilatation of the pupil, diarrhea, and death in twenty-four to forty-eight hours. At the post-mortem examination the heart is found in a state of systolic contraction, and the condition of the heart after death and the absence of convulsions during life serve to distinguish typhotoxin from an isomeric base obtained by Brieger from putrid horse-flesh. Roux and Yersin have obtained a tox-albumin. It is soluble with’ difficulty in water, and more toxic to rabbits than guinea-pigs. Tetanus.—Brieger obtained the alkaloid tetanin from impure cultures of the tetanus bacillus. It is a base having the formula C3H22N?04, The hydrochloride is a very deliquescent salt, and soluble in alcohol. Tetanin injected into guinea-pigs produces rapid, breathing, followed by tetanic convulsions. Another toxic product, tetanotoxin (C5H™UN), produces the same effects as tetanin. The formula of a third base, spasmotoxin, has not been determined. Cadaverin and putrescin are also present in cultures. Kitasato and 42 BACTERIOLOGY. Weyl analysed the products of pure-cultures, and obtained the same substances, tetanin and tetanotoxin ; and subsequently Brieger and Frankel found that in pure-cultures a tox-albumin could be obtained which is soluble in water, and infinitely more active ‘than the toxic ptomaines. Anthrax.—-In 1887 Wooldridge succeeded in protecting rabbits from anthrax by a new method. A proteid body obtained from the testis and from the thymus gland was used as. the culture fluid. This proteid substance was dissolved in dilute alkali, and the solution sterilised by repeated boiling. This. was inoculated with the anthrax bacillus, and kept at 37° C. for two or three days. A small quantity of the filtered culture fluid injected into the circulation in rabbits produced immunity from anthrax. Subcutaneous inoculation of extremely virulent anthrax blood, made simultaneously with the injec- tion of the protecting fluid, produced no effect. Wooldridge showed that the growth of the anthrax bacillus in special culture fluids gave rise to a substance which, when injected into the organism, protected not only against an immediate but also subsequent attacks. In 1889 Hankin worked under the guidance cf Koch in the Hygienic Institute of Berlin. The acquired tolerance of the effect of ordinary albumoses, and the experiments of Sewall, who pro- duced immunity against lethal doses of the albumose of snake poison by the injection of minute doses, led Hankin to expect that an albumose developed in anthrax cultures, ard that the anthrax albumose would probably confer immunity from the disease. Hankin succeeded in isolating it from culture fluids. It was precipitated by excess of absolute alcohol, well washed in alcohol to free it from addition of ptomaines, filtered, dried, then redissolved and filtered through a Chamberland filter. With this substance Hankin suc- ceeded in producing immunity in mice and rabbits. Sidney Martin, working quite independently, grew anthrax bacilli in a solution of pure alkali albumin made from serum proteids. After ten or fifteen days the organisms were removed by filtration through a Chamberland filter. The filtrate contained proto-albumose and deutero-albumose, a trace of peptone, an alkaloid, and small quantities of leucin and tyrosin. The mixture of albumoses proved poisonous to mice. The anthrax alkaloid produced symptoms and lesions similar to the albumoses, but much more rapidly and severely. It is an amorphous yellow body, soluble in alcohol and alkaline in reaction. Martin concluded that the anthrax bacillus formed the albumoses and the alkaloid by digesting the alkali albumin; and suggested that the alkalinity of the albumoses explained their toxi¢ CHEMICAL PRODUCTS OF BACTERIA. 43 properties, the alkaloid probably being in a nascent condition in the albumose molecule. Tuberculosis.—Koch prepared a glycerine extract of the product of the tubercle bacillus in pure cultivations, and found that the injection of small doses produced a remarkable reaction, both local and general, in tubercular cases, and especially lupus. This extract, called tuberculin, came to be extensively used as a therapeutic agent, but with disappointing results. Very shortly after the first announcement of Koch’s discovery, the author, in conjunction with Herroun, investigated the chemical properties and physiological effects of the products of the tubercle bacillus. Cultures in glycerine-broth were filtered through porcelain, and a clear amber-coloured liquid was obtained, which gave important and suggestive chemical reactions. As this filtrate contained the products of the growth of the bacillus most probably in minute quantities, it was evaporated at «a low temperature over sulphuric acid. The viscous residue was dissolved in distilled water and tested on the healthy guinea-pig. The result was a marked fall of temperature, staring coat, extreme irregularity of the heart’s action, muscular spasms, loss of control over the extremities, and death. A preliminary examination of glycerine-broth cultivations having shown the presence of non-coagulable proteid bodies of the nature of albuthose and peptone, and a crystallisable precipitate of a remarkable character resulting on the addition of iodine, the idea naturally suggested itself that the tubercle bacillus might form albumoses and an alkaloid or ptomaine similar to the substances isolated by Martin from pure cultivations of the Bacillus anthracis. Koch pointed out that the effective substance in his extract could be precipitated by absolute alcohol; the author and Herroun determined to investigate the properties and physiological effects of the separated products. They accordingly set to work to isolate the ptomaine, of the existence of which they had some qualitative indication, and at the same time to examine the properties of the albuminous bodies. In this endeavour the general method they found satisfactory was as follows. The clear filtrate from the culture was evaporated at 40° ©. to a very small bulk, and the residue thus obtained was mixed with an excess ef absolute alcohol, which precipitated the albumoses and peptone. Tt was found that by adding the alcohol by degrees a partial separation of the albumose from the peptone could be effected, the latter being only precipitated when the aleohol was nearly absolute. The precipitated albumose was collected on 44 BACTERIOLOGY. a filter and redissolved in distilled water. In another experiment the albumose underwent a second precipitation, and after washing was again dissolved. The alcoholic filtrate from the precipitated albuminous bodies was then concentrated at a very gentle heat until a viscous residue was left containing the glycerine originally present in the cultivating medium and the extractives and products of the bacillus soluble in alcohol. With this residue definite reactions of an alkaloidal substance or ptomaine were obtained. Careful experiments, however, led to the belief that the whole of the ptomaine was not separated from the albuminous precipitate by simple addition of alcohol, and the above method was therefore slightly modified. The ptomaine is soluble in water and alcohol, and sparingly soluble in amyl-alcohol, but insoluble in benzine, ether, or chloro- form, which liquids therefore fail to extract it from aqueous solutions. In its aqueous solutions it is distinctly but not strongly alkaline to test-paper. Phospho-tungstic acid gives with it a white flocculent precipitate. Phospho-molybdic acid gives a pale yellow precipitate, soluble in ammonia to a blue solution which becomes colourless on boiling. In this respect it resembles the vegetable alka- ‘ loids, aconitin and atropin. It must be remembered, however, that albuminous bodies are precipitated by both this and the preceding reagents, and in the case of the former a reduction of the phospho- molybdate giving the blue solution with ammonia is obtained. The reducing power of the ptomaine is shown by the conversion after a short time of ferri-cyanide of potassium to ferro-cyanide, giving the Prussian blue test with ferric chloride, to which much undue importance was attached by Brouardel and Boutmy. The solution of albumose and solution of peptone are both capable of giving this reaction as well as many vegetable alkaloids. A solution of the ptomaine is not precipitated by ferro-cyanide of potassium or potassic bichromate. In strong solutions it yields precipitates with platinic chloride (yellow), gold chloride (pale yellow), and mercuric chloride (white), That yielded by the first of these reagents is granular in character, and quite insoluble in alcohol, though apparently soluble in water. The precipitation by gold chloride excludes amides and ammonium salts. With iodine in hydriodic acid or potassic iodide a precipitate is obtained which is occasionally erystalline, more often granular or amorphous. CHEMICAL PRODUCTS OF BACTERIA. 45 This precipitate is soluble in alcohol, and is redeposited when the alcohol is evaporated. On heating it is redissolved into oily drops of a dark colour. .With picric acid a granular precipitate is obtained, which under the microscope is seen to consist of minute crystals. This precipitate, on standing, is converted into rounded crystalline masses with numerous small crystals admixed. The ptomaine appears to be easily broken up by heating, especially in the presence of mineral acids or of baryta. The actual quantity obtained from a considerable amount of culture fluid was very small, and as it was possible that when the bacilli were grown in a medium richer in albumin, such as the animal body, more of these products might be formed, the liquid obtained by extracting large masses of tubercular growths from cattle was examined in a similar manner. In this extract, after filtration through porce- Jain, an albumose, and minute quantities of a ptomaine were obtained which in reactions was identical with that obtained from the artificial cultivation of the bacillus, but present in even smaller amount. The probable explanation of this is, that. in the living animal the ptomaine is constantly being removed ; or it may indicate that it is only formed in minute quantity under those conditions. Having succeeded in obtaining the albumose and the ptomaine in separate solutions, we next proceeded to ascertain the effects of these substauces upon healthy and tubercular guinea-pigs. The effect of the ptomaine isolated from different series of cultures was as follows. A rise of temperature occurred in tuber- cular animals, and distinct enlargement of tubercular glands. There was a slight indication of a depression of temperature or hypothermic effect on healthy animals. The albumose, whether obtained from pure cultivations of the bacillus or from tubercular tissue, pro- duced a marked rise of temperature in tubercular guinea-pigs. On the other hand, in a control experiment on a healthy guinea-pig there was an equally well-marked fall of temperature. The effect upon the tubercular glands in the cases associated with marked rise of temperature was to render them well-defined, indurated, and painful, rather than any considerable increase in volume. Hunter made a chemical examination of Koch’s crude extract, and confirmed the presence of albumoses and alkaloidal substances. The albumoses consisted chiefly of proto-albumose and deutero-albu- mose with hetero-albumose, and occasionally a trace of dys-albumose. Two alkaloidal substances were obtained in the form of platinum compounds of their hydrochlorate salts. In addition there were extractives, mucin, inorganic salts, glycerine, and colouring-matter. 46 BACTERIOLOGY. Swine Fever.—Schweinitz applied Brieger’s methods in the investigation of the products of the swine fever, or hog cholera bacillus. Broth-cultures were neutralised with dilute hydrochloric acid, and “evaporated in the water bath. The residue was treated with 96 per cent. alcohol, and the filtered solution with mercuric chloride. A heavy crystalline precipitate was separated by filtra- tion, treated with water, and decomposed with sulphuretted hydrogen, and cadaverin and methylamine were isolated. The filtrate from the mercuric chloride precipitate was freed from excess of mercury by sulphuretted hydrogen, and the mercury sulphide filtered off. The residue, after concentration of the filtrate, was extracted with absolute alcohol, and the solution showed the presence of an alka- loidal salt. The double salt obtained with platinum chloride was submitted, after crystallisation, to an analysis, and the results gave the formula (C4H*4N?PtClS). The hydro-chloride is soluble in abso- lute alcohol as well as in water, and produces needle-like crystals. On treating the culture fluids with excess of absolute alcohol a white flocculent precipitate was obtained partly soluble in water, and re-precipitated by alcohol. It was obtained in the form of white crystalline plates. A watery solution gives almost insoluble needle- crystals on the addition of platinum chloride. These products were respectively termed sucholo-toxin and sucholo-albumin. Small doses of these substances produce in guinea-pigs a slight rise in tempera- ture, and ulceration at the seat of injection. Large doses produce a fatal result in six to twenty-four hours. Schweinitz asserts that he has produced immunity in guinea-pigs. An attempt to produce immunity in swine by injection of the albumose gave unsatisfactory results. Diphtheria.—Roux and Yersin finding that filtered cultures of the diphtheria bacillus produced paralysis, affecting chiefly the hind legs, and a fatal result in rabbits and guinea-pigs, proceeded to investigate the chemical products. They succeeded in obtaining a white amorphous substance which was extremely active when injected into guinea-pigs. It was precipitated by alcohol from an aqueous solution, and it was calculated that -0004 gram would destroy eight guinea-pigs of 400 grams, or two rabbits of 3 kilos. each. They concluded that the poison was an enzyme or ferment, as it not only acted in extremely small doses, but it was attenuated by heat and destroyed by boiling. Brieger and Frinkel confirmed these experiments, and asserted that the poison was a tox-albumin; but according to Martin their chemical analysis and reactions were vitiated by the fact that they CHEMICAL PRODUCTS OF BACTERIA. 47 had peptone in their cultivating medium. Martin examined the products by using as a culture medium a 1 to 2 per cent. solution of alkali-albumin in broth made from beef, omitting the peptone. After about thirty days the bacillus had converted the alkali-albumin into albumoses, which gave the reactions of proto- and deutero- albumose, with small quantities of an organic acid. A single dose of these albumoses produced weakness of the hind limbs, which after a time passed off. The animal was killed, and the nerves which were examined showed degeneration. Repeated intravenous in- jection on successive days, amounting in all to a dose of 1:69 grams per kilo. of body weight, produced high fever, followed by depres- sion of temperature, severe watery diarrhea, and emaciation. The tendon reflexes began to diminish after the ninth day, on the eleventh or twelfth day there was definite paralysis of the hind legs, and on the seventeenth day reflexes could scarcely be obtained. Martin thus gives his method of abstracting the poisonous pro- ducts either from cultures or from diphtheritic tissues. In dealing with tissues, the spleen and other organs are first finely minced and placed in rectified spirit, and the blood is also placed in spirit, and allowed to stand till the proteids are coagulated; they are then filtered, and the residue extracted with cold water, all the extracts are mixed together, and evaporated at 35° C. tv a small bulk, and thrown into absolute alcohol. Most of the albumoses are precipi- tated, the alcohol is poured off, evaporated to dryness at a low temperature, and extracted by absolute alcohol until nothing more dissolves. The residue is deutero-albumose and mineral salts. All the proteid is mixed together, dissolved in water, and precipitated by alcohol, the process being repeated to remove any traces of bodies soluble in alcohol and the excess of mineral salts. At the last precipitation the precipitate is allowed to stand under alcohol for about two months. The alcohol is then poured off, and the pre- cipitate dried im vacuo. The resulting product is a light yellowish-brown powder soluble in water, cold or boiling, giving a yellowish and faintly acid or nearly neutral reaction. It is composed of deutero-albumose with a slight amount of proto-albumose but no peptone. It gives the ordinary actions of proteids and a well-marked biuret reaction. It is precipitated from solution by ammonium sulphate, and slightly by nitric acid. The reactions are similar to those of peptic deutero- albumose. The alcoholic extract of the tissues is strongly acid, and contains free fatty acid and an organic acid insoluble in chloroform. The organic acid is readily soluble in water and absolute alcohol, 48 BACTERIOLOGY. and insoluble in ether, chloroform, and benzine. It is a yellowish amorphous body, becoming a deep brown when made alkaline. Martin concludes that whereas the Bacillus anthracis produces albumoses and an organic base, in diphtheria we find albumoses and an organic acid, Glanders.-—Kalming has obtained from cultures of the glanders bacillus an extract similar to tuberculin. This crude extract is known as mallein, and is extensively used for the diagnosis of glanders. In a glandered horse it causes a rise of temperature and swelling at the seat of the injection, and the glandered nodules become swollen and painful. Finger claims to have produced immunity from glanders by inoculation of the products contained in sterilised cultures. Schweinitz extracted from cultures a non- poisonous albumose, and obtained only traces of a ptomaine. Suppuration and Pneumonia.—Brieger obtained a ptomaine from cultures of Staphylococcus pyogenes aureus, and Roux and Yersin a tox-albumin fatal to rabbits and guinea-pigs in a few days. There was pus-formation at the seat of inoculation, with redness and swelling of the surrounding parts. From pure-cultures of the micrococcus of pneumonia Klemperer obtained a tox-albumin, for which the name pneumo-toxin has been suggested. . Enzymes on FERMENTS. Many bacteria liquefy the nutrient gelatine in which they are cultivated. This is due to the development of a ferment or enzyme, which dissolves the albumin and gelatine. Enzymes are products of the vital activity of living bacteria. Bitter, and independently Sternberg, showed that when a liquefying bacterium is removed by filtration or destroyed by heat, the culture fluid retains the power of liquefying gelatine. As this occurs usually when the reaction is alkaline, bacterial enzymes resemble trypsin and papain rather than pepsin. They can be extracted with glycerine, and are quite harmless. If injected into animals no effect is produced, and after a few hours no trace of them can be found. According to Fermi, the influence of temperature on the enzymes produced by different bacteria will be found to vary very consider- ably. The enzyme of Staphylococcus pyogenes aureus is destroyed at 55° C., while the enzyme of Bacillus anthracis succumbs at a temperature of 65° C. to 70° C. Some bacteria produce both enzymes and toxins, but many pro- duce enzymes and not toxins, and others toxins but not enzymes. CHAPTER V. IMMUNITY. THE condition of being insusceptible to an infective disease may be either natural or acquired. In studying the pathogenic organisms several examples of natural immunity will be encountered. The. bacillus of septicemia, so fatal to house mice, has been shown to have no effect upon field mice. The bacillus of anthrax is innocuous to cats and white rats. The bacterium of rabbit septicemia is equally inert in dogs, rats, and guinea-pigs. The immunity may be as in these cases complete, or only partial. Ordinary sheep are very easily affected with anthrax, but Algerian sheep succumb only to large doses of the virus. Natural immunity may not only be characteristic of certain species, but it may occur in certain indi- viduals of a susceptible species. The same immunity occurs in man, for certain individuals, though equally exposed during an epidemic of small-pox, may escape, whereas others readily fall victims to the disease. Acquired immunity is illustrated by the protection afforded by one attack of the exanthemata against subsequent attacks, Thus one attack of measles or small-pox, as a rule, affords complete protection. A knowledge of the immunity resulting in the latter case led to the introduction of inoculation of small-pox as a protection against natural small-pox, Immunity may be acquired by acclimatization, for the inhabit- ants of tropical climates are less susceptible to the diseases of the country, malarial fevers, for instance, than strangers. In civilised communities also, there appears to be a degree of acquired immunity, for infectious diseases like measles introduced among savages or isolated communities have assumed the most malignant type. The immunity acquired by protective inoculation constitutes, in connection with the study of pathogenic micro-organisms, a subject of pre-eminent interest and importance, Pasteur, in his researches 49 4 50 BACTERIOLOGY. upon fowl-cholera, observed that after non-fatal cases the disease either did not recur, or the severity of a subsequent attack was in inverse proportion to the severity of the first attack. It occurred to him to endeavour to obtain the virus of this disease in a form which would provoke a mild attack of the disease, and thus give protection against the virulent form. This attenuation or miti- gation of the virus was successfully attained by allowing cultiva- tions of the microbe in chicken-broth to remain with a lapse of several months between the carrying on of successive cultiva- tions in fresh media. The new generations which were then obtained were found to have diminished in virulence, and ultimately a viruS was obtained which produced only a slight disorder ; on recovery the animal was found to be proof against inoculation with virulent matter. The explanation given by Pasteur ofthis change was, that prolonged contact with the oxygen of the air was the influence which diminished the virulence, and he endeavoured to prove this by showing that when broth was inoculated in tubes which .could be sealed up, so that only a small quantity of air was ‘accessible to the microbe, the virulence of the cultures was retained. ' Toussaint investigated the possibility of attenuating the virus of anthrax. Sheep injected with 3 cc. of defibrinated blood, con- taining anthrax bacilli, which had been exposed to 55°C. for ten minutes, recovered, and were afterwards insusceptible. Pasteur subsequently argued that this method did not admit of practical application, because difficulties would arise in dealing with infective blood in quantity, and artificial cultivations started from this blood could not be relied upon, as they proved sometimes as virulent as ever. Pasteur endeavoured to apply the same method for- obtaining an attenuated virus of anthrax, as he had successfully employed in fowl-cholera. A difficulty was soon encountered, for in culti- vations of this bacillus, with free access of air, spore-formation readily takes place, and the spores are well known to have an extraordinary power of retaining their virulence. Pasteur found that the bacilli ceased to develop at 45°C., and he believed that spore-formation ceased at 42° to 43°C., the bacilli continuing to develop by fission only. The cultivations were, therefore, kept at this temperature, and at the end of eight days the bacilli were found ‘to have ° lost their virulence, and were quite inert when inoculated in guinea-pigs, sheep, or rabbits. This total destruction was, however; preceded by a gradual mitigation; so- that a virus IMMUNITY, 51 could be obtained, by taking it at the right time, which gave only a mild disease, and afforded subsequent protection. At Melun, in 1881, the protective inoculation against anthrax was put to a practical test. Sheep and oxen were inoculated with the mitigated virus, and then with a virulent form; at the same time other sheep and oxen were inoculated with the virulent form without previous vaccination, as a control experiment, The unpro- tected sheep died without exception ; the unprotected oxen suffered from cedematous swellings at the seat of inoculation, and a rise of temperature ; but all the protected animals remained healthy. As a result of these experiments an idea arose that by preventive inoculation with attenuated virus all communicable diseases would in time be eradicated ; but this does not follow, for all communi- cable diseases do not confer immunity after a first attack; influenza, the very reverse is believed to occur, and erysipelas of the face leads to an increased liability to subsequent attacks. Even with regard to the prevention of anthrax, Pasteur’s researches were opposed and criticised. Koch investigated the subject, and came to the conclusion that the process did not admit of practical applica- tion, chiefly on the ground that as immunity lasted only a year, the losses from the vaccination process would be as. great or even greater than from the spontaneous disease ; further, there was danger in disseminating a vaccine of the strength required to be effectual. Chauveau proved that the attenuation was due to the tempera- ture, and not to the prolonged effect of oxygen. By keeping cultivations at 42° to 43°C. im vacuo, the virulence was found to disappear in twenty-four hours, and by keeping cultivations at a low temperature with free access of air, the virulence was retained. Chauveau considered, therefore, not only that oxygen was not the agent, but that the mitigation was much more easily effected in its absence. In spite of these adverse criticisms, these researches nevertheless confirmed the principle of Pasteur’s conclusion, that immunity could be induced by experimental measures, and further showed that he had considerably advanced the methods by which this could be effected. Chauveau succeeded also in attenuating the virus by a modifica- tion of Toussaint’s method. Sterilised broth was inoculated with the bacilli, and placed in the incubator at 42° to 43°C. After the lapse of twenty hours it was removed to another incubator at 47° C. According to the time of exposure to this increased temperature, the mitigation varied in degree. Thus inoculation with the virus,. before 52 BACTERIOLOGY. it was exposed to 47°C., was fatal to guinea-pigs; but after one hour at 47°C, the virulence was diminished, and, though ultimately fatal, life was prolonged; after two hours’ exposure at 47° C. only half the animals died; and after three hours’ exposure they recovered, and were rendered refractory to subsequent inoculation, Attenuation of the virus of anthrax has also been induced by chemical means, Chamberland and Roux stated that a fresh growth started from a cultivation of bacilli which had been subjected for twenty-nine days to gj of carbolic acid was found to be inert in guinea-pigs and rabbits. Bichromate of potash added to a cultiva- tion in the proportion of ;sigy tO sono gave, after three days, a new growth, which killed rabbits, guinea-pigs, and half the sheep inoculated ; after ten days, rabbits and guinea-pigs, but not sheep; and after a longer time even guinea-pigs were unaffected. In other diseases similar results have been obtained. Arloing, Cornevin, and Thomas found that by inoculating a small quantity of the virus of symptomatic anthrax anywhere in the subcutaneous connective tissue, or a moderate quantity at the root of the tail, and even by intravenous injection, immunity was obtained from a virulent dose. In swine-erysipelas, Pasteur and Thuillier obtained attenuated virus upon quite another principle. They discovered that by passing the virus through pigeons the virulence was increased, but by passing it through rabbits it was progressively diminished, Thus a virus was obtained from the rabbit, which produced only a mild disease in pigs, and after recovery complete immunity. Similarly in rabies, Pasteur found that passage of the virus through various animals considerably modified its properties, By inoculating a monkey from a rabid dog, and then passing the virus through other monkeys, the virulence was diminished ; but by inoculating a rabbit from the dog, and passing the virus from rabbit to rabbit, the virulence increased, In rabies, Pasteur has employed another method of attenuating the virus. The spinal cord of inoculated rabbits is removed with all possible precautions, and portions a few centimetres in length are suspended in flasks in which the air is dried by fragments of potash. By this process the virulence is found to gradually diminish and finally disappear. Animals inoculated with portions of these cords, after suspension for a certain time, are rendered refractory to inoculation with virulent cords. Having rendered dogs, which had been previously bitten, free from the supervention of symptoms of hydrophobia by means of protective inoculation, Pasteur proceeded IMMUNITY. 53 to apply the same treatment to persons bitten by rabid animals, with results which tend to the belief that a real prophylactic for rabies has been discovered. Immunity may also be produced by injecting the toxic products existing in pure cultivations after removal of the bacilli. Salmon was the first to produce immunity in this way, by utilising the toxic products of the bacterium of hog-cholera, which were separated by filtration from the living micro-organisms; and shortly afterwards Wooldridge demonstrated that filtered anthrax cultures contained a substance which conferred immunity. Behring and Kitasato produced immunity by mixing cultures with terchloride of iodine. Vaillard filtered the cultures through porcelain, and attenuated the products by heating at different temperatures. Lastly, in the course of Behring’s and Kitasato’s experiments, it was found that the blood serum of animals rendered immune was capable of conferring immunity on other animals. The injection of the toxic products of pathogenic bacteria leads to the development of substances in the blood to which the term “ antitoxin” has been applied. These protective substances neutralise or destroy the injected poison, and blood serum which has thus been rendered antitoxic can be utilised to confer immunity on other animals. Haffkine’s system of vaccination as a protection against Asiatic cholera is supposed to be based upon the principle of inducing the formation of antitoxins or defensive proteids. MEcHANISM OF IMMUNITY. Raulin has shown that Aspergillus niger develops a substance which is prejudicial to its own growth, in the absence of iron salts in the nutrient soil, and Pasteur suggested that in rabies, side by side with a living microbe, there is possibly some chemical product or anti-microbe which has, as in Raulin’s experiment, the power of arresting the growth of the microbe. If we accept the theory of arrest by some chemical product, we must suppose that in the acquired immunity afforded by one attack of an infectious disease this chemical substance is secreted, and, remaining in the system, opposes the onset of the micro-organism at a future time. In the natural immunity of certain species and individuals we must suppose that this chemical substance is normally present. , Another theory is, that the micro-organisms assimilate the elements which they require for their nutrition from the blood and tissues, and render the soil impoverished or otherwise unsuitable for 54 BACTERIOLOGY. the development of the same species of micro-organisms hereafter ; this condition may be permanent, or the chemical constitution of the tissues may be restored to normal, when immunity ceases. If, however, we explain acquired immunity by the result of the growth of a previous invasion of micro-organisms, we are still confronted , with the difficulty of explaining natural immunity. A third theory is that the tissues are endowed with some power of vital resistance to the development of micro-organisms, similar to the vital resistance to coagulation of the blood, which is supposed to exist in the-lining membrane of the healthy blood- vessel; that in some species and individuals this exists to a high degree, and hence their natural immunity. But this does not explain how one attack confers immunity from a subsequent one, One would expect that the vital resistance would invariably be lowered by a previous attack, and increased liability be the constant result, A fourth theory was propounded by Metchnikoff, who maintains that immunity depends upon phagocytosis. If anthrax bacilli are inoculated in the frog, white blood-cells, or phagocytes, are observed to incorporate and destroy them antil they entirely disappear, and the animal is not affected. But if the animal, after inoculation, is kept at a high temperature, the bacilli increase so rapidly that they gain the upper hand over the phagocytes, and the animal succumbs. , It has also been suggested that bacteria may attract or repel the phagocytes, exercising either a positive or a negative chemio- taxis, This power is supposed to depend upon some special product of the bacteria. or possibly upon their toxins, as suggested by Roux. We must suppose that the negative chemio-taxis has become changed to a positive chemio-taxis in an immunised animal, so that the phagocytes, instead of withdrawing and leaving the bacteria to multiply, are readily drawn into the contest and destroy the invaders, : . In septicemia of mice, the white blood-cells are attacked and disintegrated by the bacilli in a remarkable way. It is difficult, however, to accept these observations as affording a complete ex- planation of immunity. It is difficult to conceive that the leucocytes in the blood and tissues in the field mouse are differently constituted from those in the house mouse, so that they form an effectual barrier to the onset of bacteria in the one case, though so readily destroyed in the other, or that in acquired immunity the result is due to educating the phagocytes to respond to a positive chemio-taxis. IMMUNITY. 55 Phagocytosis cannot explain the immunity which results from the injection of filtered cultures, or of antitoxins, but when blood serum of immunised animals was shown to possess antitoxic properties, a new explanation of immunity was at once forthcoming. In the light of these djscoveries immunity, whether natural or acquired, was regarded as due to the accumulation in the blood and tissues of substances which have the property of counteracting partially or entirely the products by which pathogenic bacteria produce their poisonous effects, These antitoxins, or protecting proteids, can be obtained not only from the blood but also from the spleen and the lymphatic and other glands. They result from the metabolism of the cells of the tissues of the body. Phagocytes in their conflict with bacteria may play a small part, but it is more than probable that immunity is altogether independent of phagocytosis, CHAPTER VI. ANTITOXINS AND SERUM THERAPY. Tr has been clearly shown by the experiments of Fodor and Nuttall that some species of bacteria are killed by a mixture with fresh blood. Fodor pointed this out in the case of the anthrax bacillus, and Nuttall confirmed the experiments, and repeated them with a number of different species of bacteria. Behring and Nissen followed up this line of inquiry, and found that there was a great difference in the behaviour of freshly drawn blood to different bacteria. In some cases the bacteria were destroyed, in others their growth was only retarded, and in others again they were not affected at all. Bouchard pointed out that although the normal blood serum of a rabbit may be used for the cultivation of Bacillus pyocyaneus, the blood serum of a rabbit, which has been rendered immune, will attenuate or entirely nullify the pathogenic properties of the bacillus. Ogata and Jasuhara obtained similar results by cultivating anthrax bacilli in the blood of immune animals. Buchner demon- strated that this property of fresh blood belonged to the serum and not to the cellular elements, and strongly advocated the theory that the force opposed to invading bacteria was to be found in the serum rather than in phagocytes. Similar experiments were made with the bacteria of swine-fever, and Emmerich and Mastbaum discovered that the blood. serum of immune rabbits could be used as a therapeutic agent to prevent the progress of the disease in animals already showing symptoms of infection. A new light was thrown upon this question by the experiments of Behring, Kitasato, Tizzoni and Cattani, and others in connection with tetanus and diphtheria. In these diseases the bacteria do not invade the body, but the poisonous principles elaborated at the seat of inoculation are absorbed into the system and produce deleterious effects. It was obvious that attention must be turned towards counteracting or destroying these poisonous products. 56 ANTITOXINS AND SERUM THERAPY. 57 It was in this direction that the experiments of Behring and Kitasato, in 1890, proved to be of profound importance. It was shown that the blood serum of a rabbit rendered immune against tetanus or diphtheria had no destructive or retarding effect on the growth of the bacilli, but it possessed the power of neutralising the poison developed by the agency of the bacilli. In short, the serum was shown to possess an antitoxic instead of a bactericidal power. Hankin conceived the idea that this property is due to substances of the nature of defensive proteids, and the blood serum of the naturally immune rat was found to contain a proteid body with well- marked alkaline reaction, possessing the power of destroying anthrax bacilli. Injection of this proteid into mice, together with fully virulent anthrax spores, prevented the development of the disease. Young rats are susceptible to anthrax, and, according to Hankin, they can be protected from anthrax by injection of the blood serum of the parent. Tizzoni and Cattani expressed the opinion that the antitoxic substance in the blood serum of animals rendered immune against tetanus is a globulin to which they gave the name tetanus antitoxin. Buchner proposed the term alewins (dAcéw, I defend), to signify these substances. Hankin subdivided them into sozins and phylaxins. Sozins are defensive proteids occurring in normal animals; phylaxins are only found in animals artificially immune ; and each of these are sub-classed by Hankin according to their power of attacking the bacteria themselves or the products they generate. Myco-sozins : Alkaline globulins from rat (Hankin), destroying an- pen ee sa, Sozins: thrax bacillus. Defensive proteids J present in the nor- : xX0-Sozins : mal animal, To: Of rabbit, destroying poison of Vibrio Metchnikovi \ (Gamaleia). Defensive proteids (Hankin) (Myco-phylaxins : : : Alexins (Buchner) of rabbit, destroying pig ins : typhoi acillus m- Phylaxins : 2 Defensive _proteids merich). present in the animal after it has artificially been \ made immune. 4 Toxo-phylaxins : Of rabbit, etc., destroying diphtheria and tetanus poisons (Behring and Kitasato, anti-toxin of \ Tizzoni and Cattani). Tizzoni and Cattani immunised dogs and other animals against tetanus, and employed the antitoxin as a therapeutic agent. Its 58 ... BACTERIOLOGY. active substance was precipitated by alcohol. Behring, Kitasato, and Schiitz experimented with a view to conferring immunity upon horses. The cultures were mixed with terchloride of iodine, and injected at intervals of eight days, and the antitoxic power tested on mice. By using increasingly virulent cultures, the blood became increasingly antitoxic.. Vaillard filtered tetanus cultures through porcelain, and heated the filtrate at gradually diminishing temperatures. The first in- jections were made with 10 cc., which had been raised to 60° C. for an hour, then a filtrate was used which had been heated to 55° C., and lastly, a filtrate which had been heated to 50°C. The blood became antitoxic, and by injecting increasing quantities of virulent filtrates the antitoxic power was rapidly intensified, and animals which were injected with antitoxin of full strength possessed immunity many months afterwards, Roux and Vaillard introduced another method. Virulent cultures were filtered through porcelain, and the filtrate mixed with Gram’s solution of iodine in iodide of potassium, To give immunity to a rabbit, 3 cc. of toxin with 1 cc. of Gram’s solution were injected on the first day, and increasing doses of toxin mixed with increasing doses of Gram’s solution on the following days. The same method was applied to horses, sheep, and cattle. The antitoxin was found not only in the blood, but in the urine and saliva, and in the milk in cows. With cows and goats it is necessary to proceed with the utmost care; while horses, on the other hand, bear the injections well, and are therefore more suitable for this purpose. It is also very easy to obtain large quantities of blood from the horse by inserting a trocar and cannula into the jugular vein. Frankel was the first to produce immunity against diphtheria by injecting guinea-pigs with toxin which had been heated to 70° C. Behring mixed the toxin with terchloride of iodine, or employed small doses of pure toxin. Horses, sheep, goats, and dogs were rendered immune. PREPARATION OF DIPHTHERIA ANTITOXIN. For the preparation of diphtheria antitoxin Roux cultivates the diphtheria bacillus in alkaline broth with 2 per cent. of peptone, and by preference, in flasks in which the cultivating liquid can be exposed to a current of moist air at 37°C. After about three weeks the culture is filtered through a Chamberland filter, arid if tested on a guinea-pig it will be found that jy of a cc. will kill an animal weighing five hundred grammes in forty-eight hours. The diphtheria ANTITOXINS AND.SERUM THERAPY. 59 toxin immediately before ‘the injection is mixed with 4 of its volume of Gram’s solution. This is used for several weeks, and afterwards only pure toxin is injected. The horses employed for this purpose are animals no longer fit for work, and it is necessary to inject them first of all with madlein to be sure that they are not suffering from glanders. In a horse inoculated by Roux, the injection began with 2 cc. of iodised toxin, increased to 1 cc. by the thirteenth day, and the injection continued daily. On the seventeenth day } cc. of pure toxin was injected, and this was increased by the forty-first day to 10 ce.; and on the forty-third day 30 cc, of pure toxin were injected, causing pronounced edema. The doses were still further increased, until on the eightieth day 250 cc. were injected. In two months and twenty days the horse had received 800 ce. of toxin. On the eighty-seventh day the serum obtained had an immunising power of over 50,000. By this is meant that a guinea-pig resisted inoculation of 3 ce. of virulent diphtheria culture when injected twelve hours beforehand with serum in quantity equal to the sggq5 part of its body weight. ‘ There are two tests which can be applied to the serum. First, the antitoxic serum added to diphtheria toxin renders it inert; and, secondly, if serum is injected into a guinea-pig and toxin injected several hours afterwards, no result follows. Several ways have been suggested for estimating the’ immunising power of the serum. In Ehrlich’s system, the unit is represented by °1 cc. of anti- toxic serum, which, added to ‘8 cc. toxin, will neutralise it so that the whole may be injected subcutaneously in a guinea-pig without producing edema. The standard toxin is a toxin of which °3 ce. is fatal to 1 kilo. of guinea-pig. But the preventive power of the serum is best sepeee by the result of a subsequent injection of toxin. The immunising power is estimated by the number of grammes of guinea-pig which can be protected against the minimum fatal dose of toxin by 1 ce. of anti- toxic serum. The antitoxic serum can be iten in sterilised flasks in the dark, . with the addition of a small piece of camphor, or it may be dried in vacuo, powdered, and thus supplied in a convenient form for trans- port. It has merely to be dissolved in water before use. Klein employed a modified plan by which he claimed to have obtained antitoxin in a far shorter-time; than is possible by Roux’s 60 BACTERIOLOGY. method. Unfiltered attenuated cultures were injected into the horse. Later, large quantities of living diphtheria bacilli from the surface of solid cultures, of gradually increasing virulence, were repeatedly injected so as to allow the bacilli to grow and multiply. In twenty-three days an antitoxic serum was obtained, one part of which was found capable of protecting 20,000 to 40,000 grammes of guinea-pig against more than a fatal dose of both living bacilli and the resulting toxin. Serum Treatment of Diphtheria.—The results obtained by Behring, Ehrlich, Kossel, and Wasserman, in the: treatment of diphtheria in children in Germany by means of the curative serum, and by Roux and others in France, led to the adoption of the treat- ment in this country. It is best to use an especially constructed hypodermic syringe, which can be easily taken to pieces, and placed in boiling water to sterilise it. The skin surface of the flank is washed, and disinfected with 1 in 20 carbolic, and the antitoxin is then injected. The syringe is taken to pieces, placed again in boiling water, and thoroughly cleaned, The dose will depend upon the age of the patient and the strength of the serum. From 10 cc. to 20 ce, are injected in children under fifteen, and 30 cc. to 40 cc. in older patients, and the injection may be repeated in 12 hours. The best results are said to be obtained by injecting every 12 hours, for the first 12, 36 or 48 hours, according to the nature of the case, 1,000 Behring’s units, this being the dose calculated according to the immunising power of the serum. The result of the injection is to lower the temperature and pulse, but frequently the reverse occurs, and in about half the cases an urticarial and sometimes a scarlatiniform rash is produced. Pains in the joints, in rare cases effusion, may also result from the injection. The beneficial results of the treatment are, according to the Report of the Medical Superintendents of the hospitals of the Metropolitan Asylums Board, as follows :— (1) Diminution of the faucial swelling and of the consequent distress ; (2) Lessening or entire cessation of the irritating and offensive discharge from the nose ; (3) Limitation of the extension of membrane; (4) Earlier separation of the exudation ; (5) Limitation and earlier separation of membrane in laryngeal cases ; (6) Improvement in general condition and aspect of patients ; ANTITOXINS AND SERUM THERAPY. 6] (7) Prolongation of life, in cases which terminate fatally, to an extent not obtained with former methods of treatment. Statistics have also been brought forward which show, assuming them to be reliable, a great reduction in the mortality after the antitoxin treatment. A few instances may be quoted to illustrate the statistical evidence. According to Behring, in the four years prior to the employment of antitoxin, there were in Berlin 15,958 cases of diphtheria, with a mortality of 35:2 per cent. In 1894-5 there was an epidemic of 5,578 cases. Behring asserts that if the mortality had not been’ reduced by the antitoxin treatment 1,963 would have died instead of 1,056. Behring also states that in the Charité Hospital there were 299 patients, with 53 deaths, or 16-7 per cent, In the Bethania Hospital, where antitoxin was not employed, there were 249 patients, with 112 deaths, or 43 per cent, At Vienna, at the Anna Hospital for children, the mortality in 760 cases was 50°65 per cent., but after the introduction of anti- toxin there were 40 deaths in 159 cases, giving a mortality of 25:5 per cent. In New York, it is said that before the introduction of anti- toxin the mortality ranged from 30-67 to 37-34, while in 1895, under treatment with antitoxin, the mortality fell to 19-43; but it was also pointed out that since the introduction of antitoxin many children with trifling attacks had been treated, and reported as suffering from actual diphtheria, and that they would have recovered without antitoxin, and therefore these cases have given the remedy some credit which it does not deserve. In London, according to the Report of the Medical Superin- tendents of the hospitals of the Metropolitan Asylums Board there were in 1894, before antitoxin was employed, 3,042 cases of diphtheria with 902 deaths or 29°6 per cent., and in 1895, when antitoxin was used, 3,529 cases with 796 deaths or 22°5 per cent. : a reduction of 7-1 per cent, below that of 1894, The conclusions drawn from the statistical and clinical observations are summed up in the Report thus :— The improved results in the diphtheria cases treated during the year 1895, are :-— (1.) A great reduction in the mortality of cases brought under treat- ment on the first and second day of illness. (II.) The lowering of the combined general mortality to a point below that of any former year. (III.) The still more remarkable reduction in the mortality of the laryngeal cases. 62 BACTERIOLOGY. (IV.) The uniform improvement in the results of tracheotomy at each separate hospital. (V.) The beneficial effect produced on the clinical course of the disease. A consideration of the statistical tables and clinical observations, covering a period of 12 months and embracing a large number of cases, in our opinion sufficiently demonstrates the value of antitoxin in the treatment of diphtheria. It must be clearly understood, however, that to obtain the largest measure of success with antitoxin it is essential that the patient be brought under its influence at a comparatively early date—if possible not later than the second day of disease. From this time onwards the chance of a successful issue will diminish in proportion to the length of time which has elapsed before treatment is commenced. This, though doubtless true of other methods, is of still greater moment in the case of treatment by antitoxin. Certain secondary effects not infrequently arise as a direct result of the injection of antitoxin in the form in, which it has at present to be administered, and, even assuming that the incidence of the normal com- plications of diphtheria is greater than can be accounted for by the increased number of recoveries, we have no hesitation in expressing the opinion that these drawbacks are insignificant when taken in conjunction with the lessened fatality which has been associated with the use of this remedy. We are further of the opinion that in antitoxin serum we possess a remedy of distinctly greater valne in the treatment of diphtheria than any other with which we are acquainted. On the other hand it has been urged that the decline in the mortality in 1895 in London, which has been attributed entirely to the antitoxin treatment, may possibly be partly due to the pre- valence of a mild type of the disease, and that the fall in the mortality during the seven previous years from 59 per cent. in 1888 to 29 per cent. in 1894, continued in 1895. Tt is obvious that the whole subject requires to be very carefully considered, and before any final conclusion can be arrived at as to the therapeutic value of antitoxin, the evidence of others who have had great experience in the treatment of diphtheria by the old and the new methods must be taken into account, and reliable statistics allowed to speak for themselves. PREPARATION OF TETANUS ANTITOXIN, Antitoxin for use in the serum treatment of tetanus is obtained from the horse. The tetanus bacillus is cultivated in an atmosphere of hydrogen, in flasks specially constructed for the purpose. In ANTITOXINS AND SERUM THERAPY. 63 about a fortnight: the cultures are extremely toxic. The toxin is obtained free from bacilli by filtration through porcelain. Injec- tions may be given daily, subcutaneously or intravenously, beginning with 1 ce, of iodised toxin, and gradually increasing the dose until the pure toxin may be injected without danger. - Roux and Vaillard produced immunity in about three months, When a few days have elapsed after the last injection, the blood is drawn, by means of a trocar and cannula, from the jugular vein into a sterilised glass vessel, and set aside to coagulate ; next day the serum is drawn off with a pipette, and used in the liquid state, or dried in a vacuum over sulphuric acid, and subsequently powdered. When required for use the powder is dissolved in cold water. About 5 grammes are used for a dose. Serum Treatment of Tetanus.—The result, so far, of the employment of tetanus antitoxin in animals suffering from tetanus is disappointing, and the serum treatment is not likely to be of much value in veterinary practice. Nocard infected sheep with tetanus by inserting splinters of wood infected with spores into the muscles of the leg. Tetanus supervened in eleven days, and the splinters were removed, the tissues excised, and the wounds dressed with iodoform. About twelve hours after the symptoms had shown themselves, the sheep were inoculated with antitoxic serum at intervals of one hour, but they all succumbed to tetanus. In one case the total amount injected was 160 cc. of highly antitoxic serum. The antitoxin has been employed in tetanus in man. Kanthack has collected the history of a number of cases, and they indicate that the treatment is useless in acute cases in man with a short ineubation period, while chronic cases with a long incubation period often recover after the treatment. At the same time it must be remembered that recovery often took place in chronic cases before the introduction of the antitoxin treatment. The question must still be considered to be sub judice, and a trustworthy conclusion can only be based upon a more extended use -of the antitoxin and impartial reports of every individual case. ANTITOXIN oF Septic INFECTIONS. An anti-streptococcic serum has been prepared by Marmorek. A culture of streptococcus was intensified in virulence by inoculation from rabbit to rabbit, and highly virulent cultures gave rise to a powerful toxin. Roget and Charrin also, found that the serum of immunised rabbits and of a horse conferred immunity. A patient 64 BACTERIOLOGY, with puerperal fever was injected with 8 cc., on the follow- ing day with 16 cc., and on the third day with 25 cc. On the fourth day the temperature had fallen, and the patient recovered. Favourable results are said to have followed the use of the serum in 46 cases of erysipelas, Bokenham, working independently, cultivated the streptococcus in a mixture of broth and serum. Horses and asses were inocu- lated, and a considerable degree of immunity established. The serum of an inoculated ass possessed antitoxic power. Ruffer and Bullock succeeded in immunising four horses against the toxin of Streptococcus pyogenes ; two had been previously immu- nised against the toxin of the diphtheria bacillus. The streptococcus was cultivated by Marmorek’s methods in a mixture of two parts of blood-serum and one part of peptonised broth, and the virulence of cultures maintained by inoculation of rabbits, On testing the immunising power of the antitoxic serum on rabbits, the effect appeared to be slight in comparison with the antitoxins of the bacilli of diphtheria andtetanus. In treating cases of septic infection in the human subject, it has been recommended to commence with two injections of 10 cc., and.it is said that no unfavourable results have been met with which could be attributed to the effect of the serum. Antiroxin oF TypHorp Fever anp OTHER DisEases. An antitoxic serum has been obtained by Chantemesse for use in cases of typhoid fever, and it is probable that attempts will be made to extend the principle of the antitoxic treatment to other infective diseases. CHAPTER VII. THE BACTERIOLOGICAL MICROSCOPE. THE instruments sometimes in use in biological and pathological laboratories are not sufficient for the study of bacteria. It is absolutely essential for the examination of such minute objects that the microscope should be equipped with an objective of sufficiently high magnifying power and with a special illuminating apparatus, while the mechanical arrangements of the stage must admit of the examination of plate-cultivations. It would not be within the scope of this work to give a detailed account of the mechanical arrange- ments and optical principles of the microscope. These matters are fully dealt with in special works on the subject,* but sufficient will be said to afford assistance in the selection of a suitable instrument, and to explain the improvements in the microscope which have been such an aid in bacteriological investigations. A magnified image of an object is the result of the change produced in the direction of rays of light which are made to pass through lenses. This alteration in the course of the rays is known as refraction. A ray of light passing from a rarer into a denser medium is refracted towards a line drawn perpendicularly to the surface of the latter. A ray of light passing through air and impinging on water will not pass on in the same direction, but will be refracted towards a line drawn perpendicularly towards the surface of the water. If the ray pass into glass instead of water a greater refraction will take place, and if it pass into diamond the bending in its course will be still greater (Fig. 11). The sines of the angle of incidence and refraction of different substances have a constant ratio to each other, which is known as the index of refraction, and this is determined for different substances by the refraction produced by the passage of rays from avacuum. Thus the index of refraction for flint glass is about 1-6, * Carpenter: Zhe Microscope, Nigeli and Schwenderer: The Microscope in Theory and Practice. 65 5 66 BACTERIOLOGY. the sine of the angle of incidence of a ray passing from a vacuum into glass being to the sine of the index of refraction as 1:6 to 1. If we study the course of a pencil of rays we find that some of the rays are reflected instead of entering the medium and being refracted. When, for example, a pencil of rays falls upon water or glass, after passing through air, some of the rays are lost by reflection, and the proportion of the lost rays will increase with their obliquity. The diminution of the brightness of the image when pencils of rays have to pass through lenses is thus accounted for, and this loss of light increases when the number of surfaces /Q /# ya Fic. 11.—Tue Rerraction or Licut. through which the rays pass are, as in high-power objectives, increased. There is an additional loss when there is an increase in the difference between the refractive power of the different media through which light passes. When pencils of rays pass from glass into air, and then into glass again, the loss is much greater than when the air is replaced by a medium with a refractive index more nearly approaching that of glass. This explains the value of the immersion system, which will be referred to more fully later on, and also the advantage of cementing pairs of lenses with Canada balsam or glass paste. The lenses used in the optical arrangements THE BACTERIOLOGICAL MICROSCOPE. 67 of a microscope are principally convex, and the imperfections which result must, if possible, be entirely overcome. These imperfections are spherical and chromatic aberration. Spherical aberration results from the unequal refraction of rays passing through lenses with equal curvatures. The rays passing through an ordinary convex lens do not all come to the same focus. The rays passing through the marginal portion come to a focus at a 7 R 2 1 Ua a rid FoF A |_| l R2 BR! Fic. 12.—SpPHERIcAL ABERRATION. point much nearer to the lens than the focus of the rays passing through the more central portion of the lens (Fig. 12). If the whole aperture of the lens is used there must of necessity be blurring, for at the point at which the marginal rays form a distinct image the central rays will be out of focus, and at the point at which the central rays form a distinct image the marginal rays will have diverged, causing indistinctness. This is partially remedied by using a diaphragm and shutting out the marginal rays; but this is [ee at the cost of loss of light.and diminution of the angle of aperture. The difficulty is approximately SH overcome in practice by using a combination of lenses. The aberration of a convex lens is the ‘ie. opposite of that of a concave lens (Fig. 13). The -—* makers of the best lenses endeavour to obtain this p. 13 Goy- correction as perfect as possible to get the sharpness = giyattion oF of the image, so essential in studying the mor- Lenses IN phology of bacteria. Aspais Home : . GENnEous Im - Chromatic aberration is the result of the ji pasion. unequal refrangibility of the coloured rays which compose white light. If parallel rays of light pass through a convex lens the violet rays, which are the most refrangible, will come to a focus at a point much nearer to the lens than the focus of the red rays, which are the least refrangible; and the intermediate rays of the spectrum will be focussed at points between the red and the violet. A screen held at either of these foci will show an image with prismatic fringes (Fig. 14). 68 BACTERIOLOGY. ‘ The chromatic aberration may be reduced by stopping out the marginal rays; but as it is necessary to get the most perfect correction possible, advantage is taken of the different relations which the refractive and dispersive powers bear to each other in different glasses. By combining a double convex lens of crown glass with a plano-convex lens of flint glass, correction is obtained for the violet and red rays. An achromatic objective is constructed on this principle, but the result is not perfect, as the intermediate coloured rays remain uncorrected, and what is termed a secondary spectrum gives rise to images with coloured fringes, especially at the margin of the field. Abbé and Schott, after a great number of experiments, succeeded in discovering a glass with optical properties which removed the secondary spectrum, and objectives made with the new glass are termed apo-chromatic. There is much more Fic. 14.—CHRomatic ABERRATION. perfect concentration of the component rays than in the ordinary achromatic objectives, and the advantages thus obtained are very great. The objectives can be made of higher angle and admit of higher eye-pieces being used without materially diminishing the brilliancy and definition of the image. There is a complete absence of coloured fringes, and the perfect definition is invaluable in micro-photography. Another fault which has to be corrected is the aberration caused by covering a microscopical preparation with a cover-glass. Ross was the first to point out the difference in the image when the object was examined under a cover-glass, and that by altering the position of the front pair of lenses, in an objective corrected for an uncovered object, the objective could be corrected for the covered object (Fig. 15). Objectives are generally corrected for a standard thickness of cover-glass, but H. Lister devised a screw-collar adjustment by which the position of the front pair of lenses could be altered at will; and as it is almost impossible to obtain cover-glasses which THE BACTERIOLOGICAL MICROSCOPE. 69 do not vary slightly in thickness, the most perfect definition can only be obtained by adjusting for each separate cover-glass preparation. Immersion system.—All objectives were formerly used diry— that is to say, with an air space between the objective and the specimen to be examined—but high-power objectives are now almost entirely made on the wnmersion system, a drop of liquid being interposed between the objective and the cover-glass. About fifty years ago Amici observed that if a drop of water intervened between the cover-glass or an uncovered object and the lens the image was more brilliant. The passage of rays from the object or the cover-glass into air, and again from air into glass, caused considerable loss of light. With objectives of wide angle of aperture the advantages were counteracted by the reflection of rays falling ob- liquely upon the lens. By inter- posing water more rays are bent in or refracted, and enter the lens instead of being reflected and lost. Hartnack, Nachet, and others adopted the immersion system, and Fic. 15.—OBJective witH CoLLar CorRECTION (0). high-power water immersion lenses were constructed with high angle of aperture.* It was found that there was less necessity for correcting for covers of different thickness, as the aberration from this cause was diminished. The lenses were corrected for an average thickness of cover, and slight deviations produced hardly any appreciable effect. Wenham, Stephenson, Abbé, and Zeiss carried the system to perfection. They argued that the advantages obtained by water immersion would be intensified if a liquid could be found of the same refractive and dispersive power as crown glass. The media would be optically uniform, and the result a homogeneous immersion system. * The angle of aperture is “the angle made by the most diverging of the rays of the pencil issuing from any point of an object that can enter the lens, and take part in the formation of an image of it.” The numerical aperture is defined by Abbé as equal to “the sine of the angle of aperture multiplied by the refractive index of the medium between the object and the objective.” 70 BACTERIOLOGY. After experimenting with different liquids—solutions of salts, and various essential oils—Abbé recommended cedar oil as most suitable for the purpose. In its optical properties it very closely resembles crown glass, and it is far more convenient for use than any watery solutions of salts, especially when it is necessary to make a more or less prolonged examination of an object. The difference between the dry, water, and oil immersion systems may be illustrated, as Frinkel has pointed out, by a very simple experiment. If a glass rod is inserted into an empty test-tube, it is easily visible owing to the difference in refraction between the glass and the surrounding air. If the tube is filled up with water the rod is seen with difficulty, and if, instead of water, cedar oil is used, the part of the rod immersed in the oil will entirely disappear from view. The rays of light pass through an optically uniform medium in the experiment with cedar oil, and no refraction or reflection of rays of light can occur. To use an oil immersion objective, a minute drop of cedar oil is placed on the centre of the cover-glass, and the lens lowered by means of the coarse adjustment until it touches the oil. The specimen is then carefully brought into focus with the fine adjust- ment. If the slide is held between the finger and thumb of one hand, and moved from side to side while the other hand is working the fine adjustment, there can be no danger of injuring either the objective or the specimen. Microscopes are made upon either the Ross or the Jackson model. In the Ross model the body of the microscope is fixed at its base to a transverse arm, which is raised or lowered with it by the rack and pinion. In the Jackson model the body is supported for a great part of its length on a solid * limb.” In the Ross model, unless the body and transverse arm are very solid as in Powell and Lealand’s microscopes (Fig. 23), there will be vibration at the ocular end; but in the Jackson model vibration is practically prevented, and this is most essential, especially in working with very high powers. The steadiness of the microscope also largely depends upon the form of stand. There are four different types of stands. The tripod (Fig. 23); the plate, with double columns; the single column, ending in a plate or a bent claw; and the horse-shoe (Fig. 18). The tripod stand with cork feet is the steadiest form of stand, but it is cumbrous and expensive, and these objections also apply to the model made by Ross. The single upright should be unquestionably condemned, as it THE BACTERIOLOGICAL MICROSCOPE. val Fic. 16.—EneLish Mopet. 72 BACTERIOLOGY. freely admits of vibration, and is most inconvenient for laboratory work, The heavy horse-shoe form is compact and firm, and the weight of it can hardly be considered an objection. The tubular body is from eight to ten inches in length, and within it is a draw-tube with engraved scale. By extending the draw-tube greater magnification is obtained; but as this is at the cost of definition it should hardly ever be used in the examination of bacteria. A triple nose-piece is a great convenience, saving the time which is otherwise spent in replacing objectives of different magnifying power, and there is less risk of injuring them. Focus should be obtained by means of a rack and pinion coarse Fic. 17.—RemovaBLlE MEcHANICAL STAGE. adjustment. The sliding tube is not to be recommended, as the motion may be stiff, encouraging the use of force, which in turn may result in the objective being brought violently into contact with the specimen, injuring the lens or damaging the preparation; or it may get too loose and readily slip out of focus. The stage should be flat and rigid, either rectangular or circular, so long as it is sufficiently large to accommodate a plate-cultivation. A removable mechanical stage is of great advantage for working with high powers, as a motile bacterium can be constantly kept in view while one hand is engaged in working the fine adjustment (Fig. 17). It may also be employed as a finder if it is engraved with a longitudinal and vertical scale, and provided with a stop. The mechanical stage must be removable, so that the stage proper THE BACTERIOLOGICAL MICROSCOPE. Fig. 18.—ContinentaL Monet. 73 74 BACTERIOLOGY. may be free from any attachments when required for the examina- tion of cultures. Diaphragms are necessary for regulating the amount of light. The plan of using a series of discs, with apertures of different sizes, should be avoided, as they are easily lost, and bacteriological investi- gations may have to be made under conditions in which it is difficult to replace them. A better plan is a revolving plate with apertures of different sizes, but the most convenient form is the iris diaphragm (Fig. 19). The sub-stage condenser is quite as necessary in bacteriological work as a high-power objective. In fact, the condenser and the objective should be considered as forming one optical apparatus, and the microscope regarded quite as. incomplete without a condenser as it would be without an objective. By means of the sub-stage con- denser (Fig. 20) the rays of light are concentrated at one point or on one particular bacterium ; and for the best definition it is essential that there should be mechanical arrangements for accurately cen- Fic. 19.—Iris DIAPHRAGM. tring and focussing the condenser. It may even with advantage be provided with a fine adjustment. To sum up, a microscope for bacteriological investigation should be provided with (1) a steady stand of either the tripod or horse- shoe form; (2) a tubular body on the Jackson model; (3) a wide- angled sub-stage condenser, such as Abbé’s; (4) objectives of an inch, gth of an inch, and a j,th homogeneous immersion ; (5) a removable mechanical stage ; and for the most accurate work there should be centring arrangements and a coarse and fine adjustment to an oil- immersion sub-stage condenser such as Powell and Lealand’s, and a jth homogeneous oil-immersion apo-chromatic objective. With regard to the choice of a microscope, it is chiefly a question of price. The most perfect instrument is the large model by Powell and Lealand, but it is most expensive, and quite unsuit- able for laboratory work. For general use excellent instruments are made by Zeiss, Leitz, Reichert, or Swift. The bacteriological microscopes of these makers are in the necessary equipment practically identical. The Zeiss microscope is the most finished, and costs about twenty pounds. A similar microscope by Leitz and by Swift costs about eighteen, and both make an excellent students’ THE BACTERIOLOGICAL MICROSCOPE. 75 bacteriological microscope, with a cheap form of adjustment to the sub-stage condenser, at a total cost of about fifteen pounds. Method of Illumination.—Good daylight is the best for general work. The microscope should be placed near a window with a northern aspect. Direct sunlight should never be utilised, and the best light is that reflected from a white cloud. When daylight is not available good results can be obtained with cither gas or a Fic. 20.—ABBE’s CONDENSER CONSTRUCTED BY ZEISS. paratin lamp. In the author’s laboratory the microscope lamps are fitted with Welsbach incandescent mantles. These have many advantages over an Argand burner or a paraffin lamp. A steady and beautifully white light is obtained, and the lamps are quickly lit, and require comparatively little attention. In using high powers and carefully focussing the sub-stage condenser, the image of the fabric of the mantle is embarrassing, and is an objection to this light for the most accurate observations, but in other respects, and 76 BACTERIOLOGY. for general use, it is the best form of artificial illumination for the microscope. An ordinary paraffin lamp of the cheapest form may be used, but there are many objections to it, such as the shape of the chimney, and the striz and defects in the glass. The best form of paraffin lamp is constructed by Baker and by Swift from sug- Fic. 21.—Microscore Lame. gestions by Nelson and Dallinger (Fig. 21); there is also a similar but much larger pattern which is made by Swift (Fig. 22). This form of lamp has a large flat bowl for the oil. It is attached to a standard, and can be raised or lowered to the desired position. The chimney is of metal and blackened, so that there is no reflected light, and it may also with advantage be provided with a shade, so that no light reaches the eye except through the microscope. The burner may be made to revolve, so that either the edge or THE BACTERIOLOGICAL MICROSCOPE. 17 the flat of the flame may be utilised. Great care should be taken to have the wick evenly trimmed. The best paraffin oil should be burnt, and it is as well to add a small lump of camphor. The metal chimney has an aperture in front, giving exit to the rays of light, which is closed in by a slip of glass, The glass is very liable to crack when exposed to the full force of the flame, and it is as well, therefore, to be provided with a stock of glass slips, which have ‘isan qt | Fic. 22.,—Larce Microscope Lame. been annealed by being enveloped in a cloth and boiled for two or three hours. The flat of the flame is used with low powers. The image of the flame is reflected by a plane mirror, and a bull’s-eye condenser interposed between the lamp and the mirror to give an equal illumination of the whole field. In working with high powers the lamp is turned with the flame edgewise, and the mirror is dispensed with. By working, as it is termed, directly on the edge of the flame, the illumination is greatly increased, and a band of light can 78 BACTERIOLOGY. be concentrated on that part of the microscopical preparation which requires most careful study (Fig. 23). To obtain the best definition considerable time must be spent in the arrangement of the illumination. The lamp and microscope having been placed in position, a low power is first used and the smallest diaphragm. On looking through the microscope it will probably be observed that the image of the diaphragm is not in the centre of the field. By moving the centring screw of the con- denser this may be adjusted. The image of the edge of the flame may not be central, and this must be adjusted by moving the lamp into position. The low power is then replaced by a high power, the largest diaphragm used, and the bacteria brought into focus, The diaphragm must now be replaced by one of medium size, and by racking the condenser up and down, a point will be arrived at when the image of the edge of the flame appears as an intensely bright band of light. If this is not exactly in the centre of the field the centring screws of the condenser must again be adjusted. Lastly, by trying different sizes of diaphragms, and focussing with the fine adjustment, and using the correction collar, we arrive at the sharpest possible image of the bacteria. When the condenser has been accurately centred, it will still be necessary to focus it for each individual specimen, so as to correct for difference in the thickness of slides and the layers of mounting medium. Correction for different thickness of cover-glasses must in each case be made by means of the collar adjustment in the follow- ing way. A high-power eye-piece is substituted for the ordinary eye-piece, and the fault in the image will thereby be intensified. By moving the collar completely round, first in one direction and then the other, while carefully observing the effect on the image, it will be seen to become obviously worse whichever way the collar is turned. The collar must then be turned through gradually diminishing dis- tances until an intermediate point is reached at which the best image results with the high-power eye-piece, and on replacing this by the low-power eye-piece the sharpest possible image will be obtained. Effect of the sub-stage condenser.—The sub-stage condenser gives the most powerful illumination when it has been racked up until it almost touches the specimen. It produces a cone of rays of very short focus, and the apex of the cone should correspond with the particular bacterium or group of bacteria under observation. The effect of the condenser without a diaphragm is to obliterate what Koch has termed the structure picture. Tf the component parts of a tissue section were colourless and of the same refractive power as THE BACTERIOLOGICAL MICROSCOPE. 79 80 BACTERIOLOGY. the medium in which the section is mounted, nothing would be visible under the microscope. As, however, the cells and their nuclei, and the tissue fibres do differ in this respect, the rays which pass through them are diffracted, and an image of lines and shadows is developed. If in such a tissue there were minute coloured objects, and if it were possible to mount the tissue in a medium of exactly the same refractive power, the tissue being then invisible, the detection of the coloured objects would be much more easy. This is exactly what is required in dealing with bacteria which have been stained with aniline dyes, and the desired result can be obtained by the'use of the sub-stage condenser. Tf we use the full aperture of the condenser the greatly converged rays play on the component parts of the tissue, light enters from Fic. 24.—Ramspen MicroMETER HYE-PIECE. all sides, the shadows disappear, and the structure picture is lost. If now a diaphragm is inserted, so that we are practically only dealing with parallel rays, the structure picture reappears. As the diaphragm is gradually increased in size the structure picture gradually becomes less and less distinct, while the colour picture, the image of the stained bacteria, becomes more and more intense. When, therefore, bacteria in the living condition and unstained tissues are examined a diaphragm must be used, and when attention is to be concentrated upon the stained bacteria in a section or in a cover-glass preparation, the diaphragm must be removed and the field flooded with light. Micrometer.—For the measurement of bacteria a stage micro- meter may be used with a camera lucida. The stage micrometer consists of a slip of thin glass ruled with a scale consisting of tenths and hundredths of a millimetre. The image of this can be projected THE BACTERIOLOGICAL MICROSCOPE. 81 on a piece of paper, and a drawing made, and the object to be measured can then be projected on the paper and compared with the scale. In the Ramsden micrometer eye-piece (Fig. 24) two fine wires are stretched across the field of an eye-piece, one of which can be moved by a micrometer screw. In the field there is also a scale with teeth, and the interval between them corresponds to that of the threads of the screw. The circumference of the brass head is usually divided into one hundred parts, and a screw with one hundred threads to the inch is used. The bacterium to be measured is brought into a TN Fic. 25.—MicromMEerer Eys-Precr By ZEISS. position in which one edge appears to be in contact with the fixed wire, and the micrometer screw is turned until the travelling wire appears to be in contact with the other edge. The scale in the field and the scale on the milled head together give the number of complete turns of the screw and the value of a fraction of a turn in separating the wires. In the micrometer eye-piece constructed by Zeiss, the eye-piece with a glass plate with crossed lines is carried across the field by means of a micrometer screw (Fig. 25). Hach division on the edge of the drum corresponds to ‘01 mm. Complete revolutions of the drum are counted by means of a figured scale in the visual field. Another method of measuring bacteria will be referred to in the 6 82 - BACTERIOLOGY. chapter on micro-photography. The unit of measurement is one thousandth of a millimetre or a micro-millimetre or micron, and is expressed by the Greek letter y. CARE OF THE MICROSCOPE. After use the objectives, sub-stage condenser, and eye-piece should be carefully wiped with soft linen, an old silk handkerchief, or chamois leather, and the microscope covered with a bell-glass to. protect it from dust. If a lens comes into contact with Canada balsam it must be very carefully wiped with a soft rag moistened with alcohol, and then cleaned with a soft leather. Microscopes should not be exposed to the fumes of sulphuretted hydrogen, chlorine, or volatile acids. CHAPTER VIII. MICROSCOPICAL EXAMINATION OF BACTERIA. (4) Bacrerta in Liquips, Cutrurss, anD Fresu Tissuzs. In conducting bacteriological researches the importance of absolute cleanliness cannot be too strongly insisted upon. All instru- ments, glass vessels, slides, and cover-glasses should be thoroughly cleansed before use. A wide-mouthed glass jar should always be close at hand, containing refuse aleohol for the reception of re- jected slide preparations or dirty cover-glasses. When required again for use, slides can be easily wiped clean with a soft rag. Cover- glasses require further treatment, for, unless they are perfectly clean, it is difficult to avoid the presence of air bubbles when mounting specimens. They should be left in strong acid (hydro- chloric, sulphuric, or nitric) for some hours; they are then washed, first with water and then with alcohol, and carefully wiped with a soft rag. The same principle applies in the preparation and employment of culture media; any laxity in the processes of sterilisation, or insufficient attention to minute technical details, will surely be followed with disappointing results by contamination of the cultures, resulting in the loss of much time. For the preparation of microscopical specimens it will be found convenient to use a platinum inoculating needle. This consists of two or three inches of platinum wire fused into the end of a glass rod about eight inches in length. Platinum is employed as it rapidly cools after being raised to a white heat in the flame of a Bunsen burner. It is thus completely sterilised, and in a few moments is cool enough not to destroy the bacteria with which it is brought into contact. When using platinum needles, either for inoculating fresh tubes in carrying on a series of pure cultures, or in transferring a small portion of a cultivation to a cover-glass for examination under the microscope, the careful sterilisation of the needle by heating the 83 84 BACTERIOLOGY. platinum wire till it is white hot in every part, and heating also as much of the glass rod as is made to enter the test-tube, must be carried out with scrupulous care. Indeed it is a good plan to Fic. 26.—InocuLtating NEEDLES. let it become a force of habit to sterilise the needle before and after use on every occasion, whatever may be the purposes for which it is employed. UnstatneD BactTERIA. The bacteria in liquids, such as pus, blood, and culture-fluids, can be investigated in the unstained condition by transferring a drop with a looped platinum needle or a capillary pipette to a slide, covering it with a clean cover-glass, and examining without further treat- ment. If it is desirable to keep the specimen under prolonged observation, a drop of sterilised water or salt solution must be run in at the margin of the cover-glass to counteract the tendency to dry. Cultures on solid media can be examined by transferring a small portion with a sterilised needle to a drop of sterilised water on a slide, thinning it out, and covering with a cover-glass as already described. Tissues in the fresh state may be teased out with needles in sterilised salt solution, and pressed out into a sufficiently thin layer between the slide and cover-glass. Glycerine may in many cases be substituted for salt solution, especially for the examination of micro-organisms such as Actinomyces and mould fungi. There is, as a rule, no difficulty in recognising the larger micro- organisms such as those just mentioned; but when we have to deal with very small bacilli and micrococci, they may possibly be mistaken for granular detritus or fat-crystals, or vice versa. They are distinguished by the fact that fatty and albuminous granules are altered or dispersed by acetic acid, and changed by solution of potash; alcohol, chloroform, and ether dissolve out fat-crystals MICROSCOPICAL EXAMINATION OF BACTERIA. 85 or fatty particles; on the other hand, micro-organisms remain unaffected by these reagents. Baumgarten demonstrated tubercle bacilli in sections by treating them with potash, which clarified the tissues and brought the bacilli clearly into view. Actinomyces and other vegetable structures will not disappear when sections are immersed in weak hydrochloric acid and mounted in glycerine. In examining unstained bacteria, it is necessary, in order to obtain the structure picture, that the light entering the microscope should be reduced by employing a small diaphragm, and the sub-stage condenser carefully centred and focussed. To focus an unstained specimen in which only bacteria are present, is often difficult. The slide may be gently raised towards the objective, and the stage may be constructed to enable this to be done with the index finger (Fig. 16). If on tilting the slide the organisms come into focus it will serve as a guide in working the fine adjustment. Another plan when bacteria are examined in water, is to look for an air-bubble, and then to focus its edge until the bacteria appear in view. The simple method of covering the liquid with a cover-glass will not answer for a prolonged examination, as the liquid evaporates and the specimen dries up. To keep living bacteria under observation for any length of time, in order to study their movements or spore- formation, a special slide must be employed (p. 120). SrainED BacTErRtia. Weigert first pointed out the value of the aniline dyes for staining bacteria, and we are principally indebted to Koch, Ehrlich, Gram, and Léfier for many valuable processes. The staining of fresh preparations, especially those with no coagulable albumen to fix them, may be carried out by the method of His. A slide is prepared as already described for the exami- nation of micro-organisms in the fresh state. The reagents are then applied by placing them with a pipette drop by drop at one margin of the cover-glass, and causing them to flow through the preparation by means of a strip of filter-paper placed at the opposite margin. Babés recommends another rapid means of examining cultivations. A little of the growth, removed by means of a sterilised platinum hook or small loop, is spread out on a cover-glass into as thin a film as possible: when almost dry, a drop or two of a weak aqueous solution of methyl violet is allowed to fall from a pipette upon the film. The cover-glass with the drop of stain is, after a minute, 86 BACTERIOLOGY. carefully turned over on to a slide, and the excess of stain gently and gradually removed by pressure with a strip of filter-paper. This affords a rapid means of demonstration—for example, of a ‘cultivation of Koch’s comma bacilli in nutrient gelatine—enabling the microbes to be seen in some parts of the preparation both stained and in active movement. CovER-GLASS PREPARATIONS. Bacteria may be spread out into a thin layer on a cover-glass, and then treated with a dye, or sections of tissues containing bacteria can be stained and then mounted in the usual way. The method of making a cover-glass preparation is one which is very commonly employed. In addition to its value as a means of examining bacteria in liquids and solid culture media, it affords the additional advantage of enabling, if necessary, a larve number of preparations to be made, which, when dried, can be preserved, stained or unstained, in ordinary cover-glass boxes; they are then in a convenient form for transport, and can be mounted permanently at leisure. The method is as follows: A cover-glass is smeared with the cut surface of an organ or pathological growth, or with sputum ; or a drop of blood, pus, or culture-fluid is conveyed to it with a looped platinum needle. It is absolutely necessary to spread out the micro-organisms into a sutliciently thin layer, so that the individual bacteria may be as much as possible in the same plane, otherwise some in the field will be in focus and others out of focus, and it would be impossible to obtain a satisfactory photograph of such a specimen. To overcome this it will be necessary, in the ease of cultures on solid media, to diffuse the bacteria in a little sterilised water; and even cultures in liquids may sometimes with advantage be diluted in the same way. By means of another cover- glass the juice or fluid is squeezed out between them into a thin layer, and on sliding them apart each cover-glass bears on one side a thin film of the material to be examined; or a culture is spread out into a thin film by means of a hooked platinum needle. The cover-glass is then placed with the prepared side upwards, and allowed to dry. After a few minutes, it is taken up with a pair of flat-bladed or spring forceps, with the prepared side uppermost, and passed rapidly from above downwards three times through the flame of a spirit lamp or Bunsen burner, Two or three drops of an aqueous solution of fuchsine or methyl violet will be sufficient to cover the film, and after a minute or two the surplus stain is washed MICROSCOPICAL EXAMINATION OF BACTERIA, 87 off with distilled water by means of a siphon apparatus or a wash- bottle. The cover-glass may be allowed to dry, and then mounted in Canada balsam, or it may, while still wet, be turned over on to a slide, the excess of water removed with filter-paper, and the exposed surface wiped dry. It may first be examined with a power of about 250 diams. ; and if a high magnification is required, which is usually the case, a droplet of cedar oil is placed on the cover-glass, and the specimen examined with an immersion lens. If the specimen is to be made permanent, fix the cover-glass at one corner with the thumb, and with a soft rag carefully wipe off the cedar oil; then float off the cover-glass by running in distilled water at its margin, and having made a little ledge with a strip of filter-paper, place the cover-glass up against it upon one of its edges and leave it to dry. When perfectly dry mount in Canada balsam, or put it away in a cover-glass box provided with a label of contents. In many cases it is necessary or preferable to apply the stain for a much longer period. This may best be effected by pouring some of the staining solution into a watch-glass, and allowing the cover-glasses to swim on the surface, with their prepared side, of course, downwards. Throughout all these manipulations it is necessary to bear in mind which is the prepared surface of the cover-glass. Instead of using the watery solutions of the aniline dyes the author prefers in many cases to use stronger solutions, and to reduce the staining by a momentary immersion in alcohol. Very beautiful preparations of streptococci, sarcine and other bacteria can be obtained by this method, which is as follows: Cover-glass prepara- tions are stained with carbolised fuchsine (Neelsen’s solution) for about two minutes, rinsed in alcohol for a few seconds, quickly washed in water, and either examined in water or dried and mounted in the usual way. The extent of decolorisation is a matter of practice: a momentary immersion in alcohol is sometimes sufficient ; too long immersion will remove too much of the colour ; too short immersion will leave the delicate outlines indistinct. This method is especially valuable for sarcine and streptococci, the divisions between the elements being sharply defined, and as any albuminous particles or débris in the preparation are decolorised, much cleaner and sharper preparations are obtained than with the watery solutions. lLéfler’s and other concentrated solutions may also be used, but Neelsen’s solution may be regarded as the standard one for this method. 88 BACTERIOLOGY. Aniline oil, carbolic acid, and some other chemicals, when added to the aniline dyes, have the property of acting in the manner of mordants, in some way fixing the colour in the bacteria, so that they are not so readily acted upon by decolorising agents. Loffler’s Solution.—Potash intensifies the staining power, and Koch and Léffler have both used it with methylene blue. Liffler’s solution consists of 30 grammes of methylene blue in 100 grammes of 1 in 10,000 solution of potash. It may be used with advantage for almost all kinds of bacteria. Gram’s Method.—With a solution of gentian-violet the whole film on the cover-glass is at first stained violet. By immersing the cover-glass in a solution of iodine in iodide of potassium the stain is fixed in the bacilli, but not in any débris, pus cells, or tissue elements present in the film. Consequently by transferring the cover-glass to alcohol the bacilli alone remain stained, the violet colour being merely changed to blue. By employing a contrast colour, such as eosin, a double staining is obtained. In some bacteria the sheath is by this method differentiated from the protoplasmic contents. The stock solution of gentian-violet is prepared by shaking up 1 ce. of pure aniline with twenty parts of distilled water, and. filtering the emulsion.. Half a gramme of the best finely powdered gentian-violet is dissolved in the clear filtrate, and the solution filtered before use. The details of the method will now be described. In the first place, it is much better to employ the aniline-gentian-violet solution quite freshly prepared, and the following useful method is invariably used by the author: Place four or five drops of pure aniline in a test-tube, fill it three-quarters full with distilled water, close the mouth of the tube with the thumb, and shake it up thoroughly. Filter the emulsion twice, and pour the filtrate into a watch-glass or glass capsule. To the perfectly clear aniline water thus obtained add drop by drop a concentrated alcoholic solution of gentian-violet till precipitation commences. Cover-glasses must be left in this solution about ten minutes, transferred to iodine-potassic-iodide solution until in:two or three minutes the film becomes uniformly brown, and then rinsed in alcohol. The process of decolorisation may be hastened by dipping the cover-glass in clove-oil and returning it again to alcohol. The cover-glass is once more immersed in clove-oil, then dried by gently pressing between two layers of filter-paper, and finally mounted in Canada balsam. MICROSCOPICAL EXAMINATION OF BACTERIA. 89 DovusLe STAINING OF COVER-GLASS PREPARATIONS. To double stain cover-glass preparations they can be treated by Ehrlich’s method for staining tubercular sputum, or by Neelsen’s modification, or by staining with eosin after treatment by the method of Gram. Ehrlich’s method is as follows: Five parts of aniline oil are shaken up with one hundred parts of distilled water, and the emulsion filtered through moistened filter-paper. A saturated alcoholic solution of fuchsine, methyl-violet, or gentian-violet, is added to the filtrate in a watch-glass, drop by drop, until precipitation commences. Weigert recommended that exactly eleven parts of the dye should be used to one hundred parts of the aniline solution. Cover-glass preparations are floated in this mixture for fifteen minutes to half an hour, then washed for a few seconds in dilute nitric acid (one part nitric acid to two of water), and then rinsed in distilled water. The stain is removed from everything except the bacilli; but the ground substance can be after-stained brown if the bacilli are violet, or blue if they have been stained red. Neelsen’s Solution and Methylene Blue.—Ziehl suggested the use of carbolic acid as a substitute for aniline oil, and Neelsen recommended a solution composed of 100 cc. of a 5 per cent. watery solution of carbolic acid, 10 cc. of absolute alcohol, and 1 gramme of fuchsine. This stain is commonly known as the Neelsen or Ziehl- Neelsen solution. Cover-glass preparations are floated on the hot dye for two minutes, they are then rinsed in dilute sulphuric acid 25 per cent., washed in water, immersed in watery solution of methylene blue for three minutes, again washed in water, dried, and mounted in balsam. Gram’s Solution and Hosin.—Double staining of cover-glasses can be obtained by combining Gram’s method with eosin. The method is very useful for differentiating the sheath of Streptococcus pyogenes and Bacillus anthracis, from the protoplasmic contents, and for staining preparations of pneumonic sputum, or of micrococci and other micro-organisms in pus. After decolorising the prepara- tion in alcohol, the cover-glass is transferred to a weak solution of eosin for two or three minutes, then washed again in alcohol, immersed in clove-oil, dried between filter-paper, and mounted in balsam. SraINING OF SPORES. A slight modification of the ordinary process employed in making cover-glass preparations has to be adopted to stain the spores of 90 BACTERIOLOGY. bacilli. Under ordinary circumstances the stain will not penetrate the sheath, but if it can be made to penetrate, it is not readily removed. The cover-glass preparation must be heated to a tem- perature of 210° C., for half an hour, or passed as many as twelve times through the flame of a Bunsen burner, or exposed to the action of strong sulphuric acid for several seconds, and then a few drops of a watery solution, of an aniline dye may be applied in the usual way. To double stain spore-bearing bacilli the cover-glass preparations may be floated, for from twenty minutes to an hour, on Ebrilich’s fuchsine-aniline-water, or on the Ziehl-Neelsen solution. The stain must be heated—by preference in a capsule placed in a sand-bath— until steam rises. The fuchsine is removed from the bacilli by rinsing in water and washing in weak hydrochloric acid, and then the preparations are washed again in water, and floated for a few minutes on a watery solution of methylene blue. They are again rinsed in water, dried, and mounted. Neisser’s decolorising solution consists of 25 parts of hydrochloric acid to 75 parts of alcohol. STAINING OF FLAGELLA. Koch first stained flagella by floating the cover-glasses on a watery solution of hematoxylin. From this they were transferred to a 5 per cent. solution of chromic acid, or to Miiller’s fluid, by which the flagella obtain a brownish-black coloration. The author succeeded in demonstrating and photographing flagella in prepara- tions stained with a saturated solution of gentian violet in absolute alcohol ; but these methods are now superseded owing to the much more satisfactory method introduced by Loffler. Léffler’s method depends upon the employment of a mordant. Loffer tried tannate of iron, and after a number of experiments the following method was introduced. An aqueous solution of ferrous sulphate is added to an aqueous solution of tannin (20 per cent.), until the mixture turns a violet-black colour, then 3 or 4 ce. of a 1 in 8 aqueous solution of logwood are added. This constitutes the mordant, and a few drops of carbolic acid may be added, and the solution kept in well-stoppered bottles. The dye consists of 1 cc. of a 1 per cent. solution of caustic-soda, added to 100 cc. of aniline water, inwhich 4 or 5 grammes of either methyl violet, methylene blue, or fuchsine, are dissolved. A cover-glass preparation is made in the ordinary way, the bacteria being diffused in water, and then spread out in a very thin film. After drying and very carefully fixing, the film is covered with the mordant, and the cover-glass MICROSCOPICAL EXAMINATION OF BACTERIA, 91 held over the flame until steam rises. The mordant is then washed off with distilled water, and all traces removed from the edge of the cover-glass with alcohol. The stain is filtered, and a few drops allowed to fall on the film, and after a few minutes the cover-glass is again very carefully warmed until steam rises. The stain is then washed off with distilled water, and is ready to be examined and subsequently mounted. For some bacteria it is necessary to modify the solutions, either by the addition of acetic or sulphuric acid, or by varying the quantity of soda solution. Trenkmann introduced a modification of Léffler’s system. Cover- glasses are floated for from two to twelve hours on a solution consisting of 1 per cent. tannin and 2 per cent. hydrochloric acid. After washing in water the preparation is stained with a saturated aleoholic solution of any of the aniline dyes diluted in the propor- tion of- 2 drops of the dye to 20 of water. The cover-glasses which remain in the solution for from two to four hours are then washed in water, and examined. The best results are obtained with carbolised fuchsine, diluted in the proportion of 2 drops to 20 drops of 1 per cent. carbolic. Trenkmann also recommended the use of eatechu and logwood as mordants, with the addition of very dilute acid, and subsequent staining with fuchsine. Lutesch suggested the use of ferric acetate. To avoid any deposit on the surface of the preparation, freshly prepared saturated ferric acetate is used, and 5 to 10 drops of acetic acid are added to 16 cc. of the mordant. After warming the solution the preparation is washed in water, followed by 20 per cent. acetic acid, again thoroughly washed, and then stained with hot solution of fuchsine or gentian-violet in aniline water. Van Ermengem used a mordant composed of 1 part of 2 per cent. solution of osmic acid, 2 parts of 10 to 25 per cent. solution of tannin, with to every 100 cc. of this mixture 4 or 5 drops of acetic acid. A black ink is thus formed, and the solution is applied for from five to thirty minutes. After washing in water and alcohol the cover-glasses are placed in a solution of nitrate of silver and transferred to another solution composed of 5 grammes of gallic acid, 3 grammes of tannin, 10 grammes of acetate of soda, and 330 grammes of distilled water. In a few moments they are again placed in nitrate of silver, and then washed and mounted in balsam. Sclavo’s method answers well for certain micro-organisms. The preparations are left for one minute in, solution of tannin, washed in distilled water, transferred for a minute to 50 per cent. phospho- molybdic acid, again washed and stained from three to five minutes 92 BACTERIOLCGY. in hot saturated solution of fuchsine in aniline water, washed in water, dried on filter paper, and mounted in balsam. The tannin solution consists of 1 part of tannin to 100 cc. of 50 per cent. alcohol. Nicolle and Morax also, have modified Loffler’s method. Per- fectly clean cover-glasses are used, and the film is dried without fixing in the flame. Cover-glasses are covered with the mordant, and heated for about ten seconds, and when steam rises the mordant is shaken off and the film rinsed with water. The same process is repeated three or four times, and finally the cover-glass is stained with Neelsen’s solution, holding it over the flame once or twice for a quarter of a minute; it is then washed and examined. Bunge prefers as a mordant a mixture of aqueous solution of tannin with 1 in 20 aqueous solution of sesquichloride of iron in the proportion of 3 parts of the tannin solution, 1 part of the iron solution, with the addition of 1 ce. of a saturated watery solution of fuchsine added to 10 ce. of the mixture. The mordant is kept before use, and applied for five minutes. The preparation is then washed and stained with Neelsen’s solution. In another plan the cover-glasses are immersed for one half to one minute in 5 per cent. solution of acetic acid, washed and dried. The mordant is then applied three or four times, and the cover-glasses washed, dried, and then stained with gentian-violet, dipped in 1 per cent. acetic acid, washed, dried, and mounted. Peroxide of hydrogen may be added to the mordant, drop by drop; it becomes reddish-brown in colour, and must be shaken up and filtered before use. Cover-glasses are exposed to its action for about a minute, and Neelsen’s solution is used for staining. Hessert dispenses with the mordant. The film is fixed by treating cover-glasses with a saturated alcoholic solution of corrosive sublimate. After washing, the cover-glass is stained for thirty to forty minutes in a hot dye, by preference a 10 per cent, watery solution of saturated alcoholic solution of fuchsine. CovER-GLAss ImpREssIons. One of the most instructive methods for examining micro- organisms is to make an impression-preparation. This enables us, in many cases, to study the relative position of individual micro- organisms one to another in their growth on solid cultivating media, and in some cases produces the most exquisite preparations for the microscope. A perfectly clean, usually small-sized, cover-glass is carefully deposited on a plate-cultivation, and gently and evenly pressed down. One edge is then carefully levered up, with a needle, MICROSCOPICAL EXAMINATION OF BACTERIA. 93 and the cover-glass lifted off by means of forceps. It is then allowed to dry, passed through the flame three times, and stained as already described. In some cases of plate-cultures, especially where no liquefaction has taken place, the growth is bodily trans- ferred to the cover-glass, and a vacant area left on the’ gelatine or agar-agar, corresponding exactly with the form and size of the cover-glass employed. PRESERVATION OF PREPARATIONS. After examining a cover-glass preparation with an oil immersion objective the cedar oil must be carefully wiped off, and the slide set aside for the Canada balsam to set. At a convenient time all preparations should be sealed with a ring of Hollis’ glue; the cedar oil used at subsequent examinations of the specimen will not be able to work its way under the cover-glass, and prevent the balsam from hardening. When it is ringed cedar oil can be readily wiped off, and the specimen cleaned without danger of moving the cover-glass and injuring the preparation. (B) Bacrerra 1x Sections or Tissues. Methods of Hardening and Decalcifying Tisswes.—To harden small organs, such as the viscera of a mouse, they should be placed on a piece of filter-paper at the bottom of a small wide-mouthed glass jar, and covered with about twenty times their volume of absolute alcohol. Larger organs, pathological growths, etc., are treated in the same way, but must first be cut into small pieces, or cubes, varying from a quarter of an inch to an inch in size. Miiller’s fluid may also be employed, and methylated spirit may be sub- stituted for alcohol, from motives of economy. Tissues hardened in absolute alcohol are ready for cutting in two or three days, and those hardened in Miiller’s fluid in as many weeks. Teeth, or osseous structures, must first be placed in a decalcifying solution, such as Kleinenberg’s. When sufficiently softened, they are allowed to soak in water, to wash out the picric acid, and then transferred through weak spirit to absolute alcohol. Ebner’s solu- tion also gives excellent results, especially when the structures to be decalcified are placed in fresh solution from time to time. Methods of Embedding, Fixing, and Cutting.—The author finds that freezing with ether combined with the method of em- bedding in celloidin gives excellent results. The pieces of tissue to be embedded are placed, after the process of hardening is com- 94 BACTERIOLOGY. pleted, in a mixture of ether and alcohol for an hour or more. They are then transferred to a solution of celloidin in equal parts of ether and alcohol, and left there, usually for several hours. The piece of tissue is then placed in a glass capsule, and some of the celloidin solution poured over it. The capsule can be placed Fic. 27.—Swirt’s Freezing MIcRoTome. bodily in 60 to 80 per cent. alcohol, and left until the following morning. The celloidin will then be of the consistency of wax. The piece of tissue is next cut out, and after trimming off superfluous celloidin is put in water until it sinks. It is then transferred to gum, and frozen and cut with a freezing microtome. For cutting with Jung’s microtome, the tissues are embedded MICROSCOPICAL EXAMINATION OF BACTERIA. 95 in paraffine or celloidin, and mounted on cork ; or, if firm enough, they may be fixed upon cork without any embedding material at all. Paraffine, dissolved in chloroform, will be found very service- able as an embedding material. Corks ready cut for the clamp of the microtome are smeared over with the solution of celloidin. This can be applied with a glass rod to the surface which is to receive the piece of tissue. The corks are then set aside for the film of celloidin to harden. In the case of lung, or degenerated broken-down tissue, the specimen should be left for a much longer time than is found to be sufficient for firmer structures. When ready, it is removed from the celloidin solution with forceps and placed upon the pre- Fic. 28.—June’s MicroTome. pared cork. Enough of the solution, which is of syrupy consistence, is allowed to fall on the piece of tissue to cover it completely, and the mounted specimen is placed in the alcohol to harden. The specimen will be ready for cutting next day. The specimen may be more neatly embedded by fixing it with a pin in a small paper tray, pouring the celloidin solution over it, and then placing the tray in alcohol to harden the celloidin. The embedded specimen is then fixed on a cork, which has been cut for the clamp of the microtome. The celloidin in the section disappears in the process of clearing with clove-oil. In the case of specimens embedded in celloidin, or mounted directly on a cork, the tissue, as well as the blade of the knife, should be kept constantly bathed with alcohol, and the sections transferred from the blade with a camel’s-hair brush, and floated in alcohol. 96 BACTERIOLOGY. For fixing directly on cork, small organs and pieces of firm tissue such as the kidneys of a mouse, or liver, we may employ gelatine or glycerine gelatine, liquefied over a Bunsen burner in a porcelain capsule. Glycerine gelatine may be used with advantage for fixing irregular pieces of tissue, as it does not become of a consistency that would injure the edge of the knife. The cork, with specimen affixed, is placed in alcohol, and is ready for cutting sections next day. Material infiltrated with paraffine must be cut perfectly dry, ‘and the sections prevented from rolling up by gentle manipulation witb a camel’s-hair brush. They must then be picked off the blade of the knife with a clean needle, and dropped into a watch-glass containing xylol. This dissolves out the paraffine. The sections are then transferred to alcohol to get rid of the xylol, and then to the staining solution. Staining Bacteria in Tissue Sections.—Sections of fresh tissues made with the freezing microtome are to be floated in ‘8 per cent. salt solution, and then carefully transferred, well spread out on a platinum lifter, to a watch-glass containing absolute alcohol. Simi- larly, sections selected from those cut with Jung’s microtome may be transferred from the spirit to absolute alcohol. The sections may be then stained by any of the methods to be described. It is often advisable to employ some method which will enable one to study the structure of the tissue itself; and sections, however stained, should always be first examined with low powers, to enable one to recognise the tissue under examination, and to examine in many cases the topographical distribution of masses of bacteria. With a power of about 250 diams. (one-sixth), very many bacteria can be distinguished ; and with the oil immersion lenses the minutest bacilli and micrococci can be recognised, and the exact form of individual bacteria accurately determined. As most good modern instruments are provided with a triple nose-piece, there is no loss of time in examining a preparation successively with these different powers. Weigert’s Method.—A very useful method for staining both the tissue and the bacteria is as follows: Place the sections for from six to eighteen hours in a 1 per cent. watery solution of any of the basic aniline dyes (methyl violet, gentian violet, fuchsine, Bis- marck brown). To hasten the process, place the capsule containing the solution in the incubator, or heat it to 45° GC. A stronger solution may also be employed, in which case the sections are far more rapidly stained, and are easily over-stained. In the latter case MICROSCOPICAL EXAMINATION OF BACTERIA. 97 they must be treated with a half-saturated solution of carbonate of potash. In either case the sections are next washed with distilled water, and passed through 60 per cent. alcohol into absolute alcohol. When almost decolorised, spread out the section carefully on a platinum lifter and transfer it to clove-oil, or stain with picro-carmine solution (Weigert’s) for half an hour, wash in water, alcohol, and then treat with clove-oil. After the final treatment with clove-oil, transfer with the platinum lifter to a clean glass slide. Dry the preparation by pressure with a piece of filter-paper folded several times, and preserve in Canada balsam, dissolved in xylol. Gram’s Method.—In the method of Gram sections are stained for ten minutes in a capsule containing aniline-gentian-violet solution. Great care must be taken not to injure the sections. If there is any difficulty in finding them, it is best to carefully pour off the stain and fill up the capsule with water. The sections are then readily visible, and can be taken up on the end of a glass rod and placed in the iodine and iodide of potassium solution, where they remain for two or three minutes, until stained uniformly brown and resembling in appearance a boiled tea-leaf. They are then placed in absolute alcohol, and washed by carefully moving the sections in the liquid with a glass rod. When completely decolorised they are spread out on a lifter, and transferred to clove-oil until completely clarified. Each is transferred with a lifter to a slide, and the clove-oil is run off and then completely removed by gently pressing two or three layers of filter-paper upon the section. Finally, the section is mounted in Canada balsam. The process of decolorisation may be hastened by transferring the section from alcohol to elove-oil, and back again to alcohol, repeating this two or three times. On examination the tissue appears colourless, or slightly tinged yellow from too long immersion in the iodine solution, while the micro-organisms are stained blue or blue-black. Double staining is obtained by transferring the sections after decolorisation to eosin, Bismarck brown, or vesuvin. They are left in a watery solution for two or three minutes, then again washed in alcohol, before clarifying in clove-oil and mounting in balsam. Another instructive method is to place the decolorised sections in picro-carminate of ammonia for three or four minutes, and then treat with alcohol and clove-oil. A similar result is obtained by placing the sections in Orth’s solution (picro-lithium carmine), transferring to acidulated alcohol, and then passing through clove-oil and mounting in balsam. 7 98 BACTERIOLOGY. In Ehrlich’s method delicate sections are liable to be injured by immersion in the nitric acid, and therefore Watson-Cheyne suggested the use of formic acid. The Ziehl-Neelsen method, in which sulphuric acid is used instead of nitric acid, is much to be preferred to Ehrlich’s method. Ziehl-Neelsen Method:—The solution is warmed, and sections left in it for ten minutes. The red colour, which disappears when the section is placed in weak sulphuric acid (25 per cent.), may partly return when the section is placed in water. In this case the section must be again immersed in acid and passed backwards and forwards from acid to water until the red colour has completely, or almost completely, disappeared. It must be thoroughly washed in water to remove all traces of the acid, and then placed in a watery solution of methylene blue for two or three minutes, washed again in water, immersed in alcohol, clarified in clove-oil, and mounted in the usual way. Sections are brilliantly stained, and the results are very permanent. Many special methods of staining have been introduced, and will be given in subsequent chapters with the description of the bacteria to which they apply. The methods already described are those which are more or less in constant use in studying bacteria and in conducting original researches. CHAPTER IX. PREPARATION OF NUTRIENT MEDIA AND METHODS OF CULTIVATION. To cultivate micro-organisms artificially, and, in the case of the pathogenic bacteria, to fulfil the second of Koch’s postulates, they must be supplied with nutrient material free from pre-existing micro-organisms. Hitherto various kinds of nutrient liquids have been employed, and in many cases they still continue to be used with advantage, but for general use they have been, in a great measure, supplanted by the methods of cultivation on sterile solid media about to be described. The advantages of the latter methods are numerous. In the first place, in the case of liquid media, in spite of elaborate precautions and the expenditure of much labour and time, it was almost impossible or extremely difficult to obtain a pure culture. When a drop of liquid containing several kinds of bacteria is introduced into a liquid medium, we have a mixed cultivation from the very first. If in the struggle for existence some bacteria were unable to develop in the presence of others, or a change of temperature and soil allowed one form to predominate over another, then we might be led to the conclusion that many bacteria were but developmental forms of one and the same micro- organism ; while possibly the contamination of such cultures might lead to the belief in the transformation of a harmless into a patho- genic bacterium. The secret of the success of Koch’s methods greatly depends upon the possibility, in the case of starting with a mixture of micro-organisms, of being able to isolate them completely one from another, and to obtain an absolutely pure growth of each cultivable species. When sterile nutrient gelatine has been liquefied in a tube and inoculated with a mixture of bacteria in such a way that the individual micro-organisms are distributed throughout it, and the liquid is poured out on a plate of glass and allowed to solidify, the individual bacteria, instead of moving about freely as in a liquid medium, are fixed in one spot, where they develop individuals of 99 100 BACTERIOLOGY’. their own species. In this way colonies are formed each possessing its own biological characteristics and morphological appearances. When an adventitious germ from the air falls upon the culture, it also grows exactly upon the spot upon which it fell, and can be easily recognised as a stranger. To maintain the individuals isolated from one another during their growth, and free from contamination, it is only necessary to thin out the cultivation, and to protect the plates from the air. The slower growth of the micro-organisms in solid media, affording much greater facility for examining them at various intervals and stages of development, is an additional point in favour of these methods; and the characteristic macroscopical appearances so frequently assumed are, more especially in the case of morpho- logical resemblance or identity, of the greatest importance. ‘The colonies on nutrient gelatine (examined with a low power) of micro- organisms such as Bacillus anthracis and Proteus mirabilis, the naked eye appearances in test-tubes of the growth of the bacilli of anthrax and tubercle, and the brilliant growth of Micrococcus prodigiosus, may be quoted as examples in which the appearances are often very striking and sometimes quite characteristic. Sorip Menta. i (A) Preparation or Nutrient GELATINE AND NUTRIENT AGAR-AGAR. Nutrient Gelatine is prepared as follows: Take half a kilo- gramme of beef (one pound), as free as possible from fat. Chop it up finely, transfer it to a flask or cylindrical vessel, and shake it up well with a litre of distilled water. Place the vessel in an ice- pail, ice-cupboard, or in winter in a cold cellar, and leave for the night. Next morn- ing commence with the preparation of all requisite apparatus. Thoroughly wash and rinse with alcohol about 100 test-tubes, and allow them to dry. Plug the mouths of the test-tubes with cotton-wool, taking care that the plugs fit firmly but not too tightly. Place them in their wire cages in the hot-air steriliser, to be heated for an hour at a temperature of 150° C. In the same manner cleanse and sterilise several flasks and a small glass funnel. In the meantime the meat infusion must be again Fic. 29.—Wire Cace FOR TEST-TUBES. well shaken, and the liquid portion separated by filtering and DESCRIPTION OF PLATE II. Pure-cultivations of Bacteria. Fig. 1.—ln the depth of Nutrient Gelatine. A pure-cultivation of Kochs comma-bacillus (Spirillum cholerze Asiatic) showing in the track of the needle a funnel-shaped area of liquefaction enclosing an air-bubble, and a white thread. Similar appearances are produced in cultivations of the comma-bacillus of Metchnikoff. Fig. 2.—On the surface of Nutrient Gelatine. A pure-cultivation of Bacillus typhosus on the surface of obliquely solidified nutrient gelatine. Fie. 3.—On the surface of Nutrient Agar-agar. Pure-cultivation of Bacillus indicus on the surface of obliquely solidified nutrient agar-agar. The growth has the colour of red sealing-wax, and a peculiar crinkled appearance. After some days it loses its bright colour and becomes purplish, like an old cultivation of Micrococcus prodigiosus. ‘FIG. 4.—On the surface of Nutrient Agar-agar. A pure-cultivation obtained from an abscess (Staphylococcus pyogenes aureus). Fig. 5.—On the surface of Nutrient Agar-agar. A pure-cultivation obtained from green pus (Bacillus pyocyaneus). The growth forms a whitish, transparent layer, composed of slender bacilli, and the green pigment is diffused throughout the nutrient jelly. The growth appears green by transmitted light, owing to the colour of the jelly behind it. Fie. 6.—-On the surface of Potato. A pure-cultivation of the bacillus of glanders on the surface of sterilised potato. Plate IL Fig 6 Fig 5 Fig 4 Fig3 Fig 1. Vincent Brocks,Day & Son, Lith akshanle,fecit ATIONS. Se V PURE-CULTI NUTRIENT MEDIA AND METHODS OF CULTIVATION. 101 squeezing through a linen cloth or a meat press. The red juice thus obtained must be brought up to a litre by transferring it to a large measuring glass and adding distilled water. It is then poured into a sufficiently large and strong beaker, and set aside after the addition of 10 grammes of peptone, 5 grammes of common salt and 100 grammes of best gelatine. In about half an hour the gelatine is sufficiently softened, and subsequent heating m a water-bath causes it to be completely Fanaa _ | Fic. 30.—Hor Arr STeRiLiser. dissolved. The danger of breaking the beaker may be avoided by placing a cloth, several times folded, at the bottom of the water-bath. The next process requires the greatest care and attention. Some micro-organisms grow best in a slightly acid, others in a neutral or slightly alkaline, medium. For example, for the growth and characteristic appearances of the comma bacillus of Asiatic cholera a faintly alkaline soil is absolutely essential. This slightly alkaline medium will be found to answer best for most micro-organisms, and may be obtained as follows :—- With a clean glass rod dipped in the mixture, the reaction upon litmus-paper may be ascertained, and a concentrated solution of carbonate of soda must be added drop by drop, until red litmus- 102 BACTERIOLOGY. paper becomes faintly blue. If it has been made too alkaline, it can be neutralised by the addition of lactic acid. Finally, the mixture is heated for an hour in the water-bath. Ten minutes before the boiling is completed, the white of an egg beaten up with the shell is added, and the liquid is then filtered while hot. For the filtration, the hot-water apparatus (Fig. 31) can be used with advantage, furnished with a filter of Swedish paper, which may be conveniently i} made in the following way :— i About eighteen inches square | of the best and stoutest filter paper egugTTO rrp is first folded in the middle, and Fy then creased into sixteen folds. The | Gaull i Will = :S filter is made to fit the glass funnel O « by gathering up the folds like a fan, ~ and cutting off the superfluous part. The creasing of each fold should be made firmly to within half an inch of the apex of the filter, which part is to ke gently inserted into the tH tube of the funnel. To avoid la bursting the filter at the point, the i) ) EXPERIMENTS UPON THE LIVING ANIMAL. 135 Subcutaneous inoculation is very simple and effectual, and con- sequently the method most frequently employed. The animal selected—for example, a guinea-pig—is held by an assistant, who covers it with a towel, leaving only the hind extremities exposed. By so doing, and gently laying it upon its back, with its head low, a guinea-pig passes apparently into a state of hypnotism, and the Fic. 69.—Kocw’s SyRinceE. trivial operation can be performed with little or no movement on the part of the animal. From a spot on the inner side of the thigh the hair is cut close with a small pair of scissors curved on the flat, and the skin must be thoroughly purified with 1 in 20 carbolic acid. A small fold of skin is then pinched up with a pair of sterilised forceps, and with a pair of sharp sterilised scissors, or with a tenotomy knife, a minute incision is made. A sterilised platinum loop is charged with the material to be inoculated, and the loop is gently inserted under the skin, forming a small pocket in the subcutaneous tissue. The needle is then withdrawn, and the sides of the wound gently pressed into apposition and painted over with collodion. Fic. 70.—SyRINGE WITH ASBESTOS PLUG. In inoculating a mouse the same process is adopted, with the exception that the root of the tail is the usual site of the operation. In some cases it may be necessary to inoculate cultures diffused in sterilised salt solution, or blood or lymph containing bacteria, or a culture in broth, or a filtrate containing the toxic products, 136 ; BACTERIOLOGY. and then a hypodermic syringe may be required. One of the ordinary pattern may be used, but it is very much better to employ a syringe which has been especially constructed to admit of thorough dis- infection. Koch’s syringe is a convenient form, the liquid being expressed by pressure on a rubber ball. The author has generally preferred to improvise a substitute for the hypodermic syringe which can be quickly made, and is destroyed after use, so that there can be no possible risk of accidentally infecting other animals. A short length of ordinary glass-tubing is sterilised, and plugged at one end with sterilised cotton-wool ; about three inches from the plug a bulb is blown about the size of a marble, and two inches below this the glass is drawn out into a long capillary tube. A sufficient quantity of the liquid to be injected rises up into the tube by capillary attraction, or can be drawn up by means of an india-rubber ball, until the bulb is full. The point of .. the capillary tube is inserted through the opening in the skin, and gently pushed into the subcutaneous tissue, and then withdrawn for a short distance. By pressure on the bulb the contents of the tube are injected. In dealing with chemical products there is no risk in applying the lips and blowing out the contents of the tube, or indeed of filling it by suction, for if too much force were applied the liquid which might enter the mouth would be stopped by the cotton-wool plug. A number of these capillary tubes can be placed in a small case, and when it is necessary to go to a distance to investigate an outbreak, they will be found most convenient to bring back lymph or blood to the laboratory for further study. . Sternberg takes a piece of glass-tubing, blows a bulb at one end, and draws out the other end into a thin tube. By heating the bulb and then dipping the tube into the liquid to be inoculated the latter rises in the tube as the bulb cools. After inserting the point of the tube subcutaneously the bulb is again heated, and the liquid is forced out into the tissues. Intravenous Injection.—A cultivation of micro-organisms may be mixed with sterilised water, and then injected with a syringe directly into the circulation. This may be performed without much difficulty by injecting, with a hypodermic syringe, the large vein at the base of the ear in rabbits, or the jugular vein in large animals. Special Operations.—In many cases it is absolutely necessary to perform an operation of greater severity. After the administration of an anesthetic, infective material may be inserted, or injected, into the peritoneal cavity, or injected into the duodenum in the manner EXPERIMENTS UPON THE LIVING ANIMAL. 137 employed in the case of Koch’s comma bacilli by Nicati and Rietsch. In such cases antiseptic precautions must be rigidly followed, and use made of iodoform and other antiseptic dressings. The disinfec- tion of the skin of the animal, of the instruments employed, and of the hands of the operator, are details essential to secure success. To inoculate tubercular matter, sputum may be rubbed up with distilled water, and some of the mixture injected into a tracheal fistula; or the first steps of the operation of iridectomy may be performed and tubercular material inserted into the anterior chamber of the eye, but this method is only justifiable when it is absolutely necessary for the results and changes to be observed from day to day. To inoculate rabbits or other animals with the virus of rabies, the skull is trephined, and an emulsion prepared from the spinal cord of a rabid animal is injected beneath the dura mater. Before every inoculation the instruments must be sterilised in a hot-air steriliser or by immersion in boiling water in a flat dish or enamel tray heated by a spirit-lamp, and after each operation all instruments should be placed in carbolic acid (1 in 20) or in boiling water, wiped dry, and again sterilised in the hot-air steriliser, before they are put away. If these precautions are not observed, instances of accidental infection are sure to occur. After the inoculation is completed a careful record must be made of the date and details of the experiment. The form in which the virus was used, the quantity employed, and the seat of inoculation, must be taken into account. The animals must be kept under close observation, the temperature taken, and any signs of illness, such as ceasing to feed, difficulty in breathing, staring coat, and any local signs, such as the development of a tumour or an enlargement of the lymphatic glands, must be carefully noted. It is perhaps hardly necessary to add that in this country no experiments of any kind may be performed on living animals without a license. Meruop oF Dissection AND EXAMINATION. All animals that die after an experimental inoculation should be examined immediately after death. Every precaution must be taken in conducting the dissection, to exclude extraneous micro- organisms, and all instruments employed must have been sterilised in the hot-air steriliser, or by immersion in boiling water. Ifa mouse, for example, has died after inoculation with anthrax, it should be at 138 BACTERIOLOGY. once pinned out by its feet on a slab of wood or in a gutta-percha tray, and bathed with | in 40 carbolic. In the same way, before examining a dead rabbit, a stream of carbolic should be directed over it to lay the fur, which otherwise interferes with the dissection, The hair should be cut away with sterilised scissors from the seat of inoculation, which is the first part to be examined, and any suppuration, hemorrhage, cedema, or other pathological change should be carefully noted. From any pus or exudation that may be present, material for inoculations should at once be taken, and cover-glass-preparations made for microscopical examination. To examine the internal organs and to make inoculations from the blood of the heart or spleen, the skin is cut through from below upwards in the median line of the abdominal and thoracic regions. The abdominal cavity is then opened, and the walls pinned back. on either side of the animal. Any abnormal appearances in the peritoneum should be noted, and the state of the spleen should be carefully examined by turning the intestines aside. After noting its appearances, it should be removed with sterilised forceps and scissors, and deposited upon a sterilised glass slide, and incised with sterilised scissors. The cut surface is then touched with the point of a sterilised inoculating needle, and cultures are made in test-tubes of nutrient gelatine and agar-agar, and also on potato, and in broth in the form of drop-cultivations. Precisely the same care must be taken in examining lymphatic glands, tubercles, or pathological nodules ; any chance putrefactive micro-organisms on the surface should be destroyed by carbolic acid or the actual cautery; an incision is then made, and a minute fragment snipped out of the centre of the nodule, which can be inoculated in the living animal or transferred to a cultivating medium. The examination of the thorax is made by cutting through the ribs on either side of the sternum with sterilised: scissors, and turning the sternum up where it will be out of the way. The pericardium is then opened, and the right auricle or ventricle pierced with the point of a sterilised scalpel, and inoculations and -cover- glass- preparations are made from the blood which escapes. The lungs also require to be especially studied. ‘They should be incised with a sterilised scalpel, and inoculations and cover-glass- preparations made from the cut surface. It may be necessary to embed a piece of lung or fragment of spleen, so that it shall be free from air. This may be done by isolating a fragment with the precautions just described, and depositing it upon the surface of a test-tube of nutrient agar-agar. The contents of another tube, EXPERIMENTS UPON THE LIVING ANIMAL. 139 which have been liquefied, and allowed to cool almost to the point of gelatinisation, must then be poured over it. From a potato a little cube must be cut, the tissue deposited in the trough thus formed, and the cube replaced, or cultures may be prepared by any of the methods which have been described for dealing with anaerobic bacteria. Blood may also be taken directly from a vein by laying it bare by dissection, making a small opening with sterilised scissors, and inserting a looped platinum needle, the needle of a hypodermic syringe, a capillary tube, or the extremity of the capillary neck of a Sternberg’s bulb. If the cultivation, in spite of these precautions, is contaminated, or if there was more than one organism present in the blood or tissues under examination, it will be necessary to separate the different kinds by plate-cultivation. Having completed the dissection, the organs of such a small animal as a mouse may be removed en masse, and transferred to absolute alcohol for subsequent examination. In other cases it may be only necessary to reserve portions of each organ. 1n experimenting with a virulent micro-organism like anthrax, any remaining part of the animal should be cremated, and the hands and all instruments should be thoroughly disinfected. Isolation of Micro-organisms during Life.—Micro-organisms in the living subject may be isolated from the pus of abscesses, or other discharges, and from the blood and tissues. Abscesses should be opened, and other operations performed, when practicable, with Listerian precautions, and a drop of the discharge taken up with it looped needle or capillary pipette, as already explained. To make a cultivation from the blood of a living person, the tip of a finger must be well washed with soap and water and sponged with 1 in 20 carbolic. Venous congestion is produced by applying an elastic band or ligature to the finger, which is pricked with a sterilised sewing needle. From the drop of blood which exudes the necessary inoculations and examinations can be made. Another way of extracting blood from the living patient is to apply a leech. This method has been found of considerable value in experimenting upon the blood of patients suffering from malaria, and may be useful in other diseases, if the blood is required for further examination, or in quantity. CHAPTER XI. EXAMINATION OF AIR, SOIL, AND WATER. AIR. TuE air, as is well known, contains in suspension, mineral, animal, and vegetable substances. _ The mineral world is represented by such substances as silica, silicate of aluminium, carbonate and phospate of calcium, which may be raised from the soil by the wind, and particles of carbon, etc., which gain | access from acci- dental sources. Belonging to the animal kingdom we find the débris of perished creatures, as well as, sometimes, living animals. The vegetable world supplies micrococci, bacilli, and other forms of the great family of bacteria, spores of other fungi, pollen seeds, parts of flowers, and so forth. The air of hospitals and sick rooms has been found to be especially rich in vegetable forms; fungi and spores have been stated to ke present in particularly large numbers in cholera wards; spores of tricophyton have been dis- covered in the air of hospitals for diseases of the skin, and of achorion in wards with cases of favus. The tubercle bacillus is said to have been detected in the breath of patients suffering from phthisis. — These points indicate that, in addition to the interest for the micro-biologist, considerable importance, from a hygienic point of view, must be attached to the systematic examination of the air. A knowledge of the microbes which are found in the air of marshy and other unhealthy districts, and in the air of towns, dwellings, hospitals, workshops, factories, and mines, will be of practical value. Miquel, who has particularly studied the bacteria in the air, has found that their number varies considerably. The average number per cubic metre of air for the autumn quarter at Mont- souris is given as 142, winter quarter 49, spring quarter 85, and summer quarter 105. In air collected 2,000 to 4,000 metres above the sea-level,~not a single bacterium or fungus spore was found, while in 10 cubic metres of air from the Rue de Rivoli (Paris) the number was computed at 55,000. 140 EXAMINATION OF AIR, SOIL, AND WATER. 141 The simplest method for examining the organisms in air consists in exposing plates of glass or microscopic slides coated with glycerine, or with a mixture of glycerine and grape sugar, which is stable, colourless, and transparent. Nutrient gelatine spread out on glass plates may be exposed to the air for a certain time, and then put aside in damp chambers for the colonies to develop. Sterilised potatoes, prepared in the usual way, may be similarly exposed. In both the last-mentioned methods separate colonies develop, which may be isolated, and pure cultivations carried on in various other nutrient media. Nutrient gelatine has also been employed in the special methods of Koch and Hesse. Koch's Apparatus.—This consists of a glass jar, about six inches high, the neck of which is plugged with cotton-wool. In the interior is a shallow glass capsule, which can be removed by means of a brass lifter. The whole is sterilised by exposure to 150° C. for an hour in the hot-air steriliser. The nutrient gelatine in a stock-tube is liquefied, and the contents emptied into the glass capsule. The jar‘is exposed to the air to be examined for a definite time, the cotton-wool plug replaced, and the apparatus set aside for the colonies to develop. Hesse’s Apparatus.—The advantage of this apparatus is that it enables the experimenter to examine a known volume of air. A glass cylinder, 70 cm. long and 3°5 cm. in diameter, is closed at one end by an india-rubber cap, perforated in the centre. Over this fits another cap, which is not perforated. The opposite end of the cylinder is closed with a caoutchouc stopper, perforated to admit a glass tube plugged with cotton-wool. The tube can be connected by means of india-rubber tubing with an aspirating apparatus, which consists of a couple of litre-flasks, suspended by hooks from the tripod-stand which supports the whole apparatus. The cylinder, caps, and plug are washed with solution of carbolic acid, and then with alcohol. After being thus cleansed, 50 cc. of nutrient gelatine are introduced, and the whole sterilised by steaming for half an hour for three successive days. After the final sterilisation, the cylinder is rotated on its long axis, so that the nutrient medium solidifies in the form of a coating over the whole of the interior. When required for use, the cotton-wool plug is removed from the small glass tube, and the latter connected with the upper flask by means of the india-rubber tubing. The apparatus is placed in the air which is to be examined, the outer india-rubber cap removed from the glass cylinder, and the upper flask tilted until the water begins to flow into the lower one. 142 : BACTERIOLOGY. The emptying continues by siphon action, and air is drawn in along the cylinder to replace the water. When the upper flask is empty, the position of the two is reversed, atid the flow again started. When a sufficient volume has been drawn through the cylinder, the outer cap and the cotton-wool plug are replaced, and it is set aside for the colonies to develop. As an example, twenty-five litres of air from an open square in Berlin gave rise to three colonies of bacteria. and sixteen moulds; on the other hand, two litres from a school- a Fic. 71.—Hessr’s APPARATUS. room just vacated by the scholars gave thirty-seven colonies of bacteria and thirty-three moulds. Porous substances, such as sand, powdered glass, or sugar, may be used for the filtration of samples of air; and an apparatus is employed in a convenient form to be conveyed to the laboratory for the subsequent examination. ; Petri’s Apparatus consists of a glass-tube 9 em. long, containing two sand-filters separated from each other. A known volume of air is aspirated through the tube. The bacteria are arrested and can EXAMINATION OF AIR, SOIL, AND WATER. 143 be examined by spreading the sand out in a dish and covering it with nutrient gelatine ; or it may be shaken up with sterilised water and plate-cultivations prepared. The sand-filter nearest to the aspirator should remain free from bacteria. Sedgwick and Tucker employ a glass cylinder which is drawn out at one end into a narrow tube to contain sterilised powdered cane sugar. Both ends of the apparatus are plugged with sterilised cotton-wool. By means of an exhausting apparatus a known volume of air is drawn through the tube. The cotton-wool plug is re- : S , A Fic. 72.,.-Sep¢wick AND TucKER’s TUBE. moved, and liquid gelatine is introduced into the cylinder, the plug is replaced, and the sugar is shaken into and quickly dissolves in the jelly. The cylinder is then treated in the same way as a roll-culture, and set aside for the colonies to develop (Fig. 72). Various forms of “aeroscopes” and “ aeroniscopes” have from 1] = J \ Fic. 73.—PovucuHet’s AEROSCOPE. time to time been employed. Pouchet’s aeroscope consists of a small funnel, drawn out to a point below which is a glass slip coated with 144 BACTERIOLOGY. glycerine. The end of the funnel and the glass slip are enclosed in an air-tight chamber, from which a small glass tube passes out and is connected by india-rubber tubing with an aspirator (Fig. 73). The air passing down the funnel strikes upon the glycerine, which arrests any solid particles. For a full description of the apparatus employed by Maddox, Cunningham, and Miquel, reference should be made to the writings of these authors, and particularly to the treatise published by the last-named. SoIL. Surface soil is exceedingly rich in bacteria. Miquel has com- puted that there exists in a gramme of soil an average of 750,000 germs at Montsouris, 1,300,000 in the Rue de Rennes, and 2;100,000 in the Rue de Monge. As agents in putrefaction and fermenta- tion they play a very important réle in the economy of nature ; but there exist in addition,~badteria in the soil which are patho- genic in character. Pasteur has succeeded in isolating the bacillus of anthrax from the earth. Sheep, sojourning upon a plot of ground where animals with anthrax have been buried, may suecumb to the disease. Pasteur considered that the spores were conveyed by worms from buried carcasses to the surface soil. The bacilli of malignant edema and tetanus are also present in soil. Nicolaier produced tetanus in mice and rabbits by, inoculating a little garden earth under the skin. To obtain a cultivation of the microbes in soil a sample of the latter must be first dried and then triturated. It may then be shaken up with distilled water, and from this a drop transferred to sterilised broth. The employment of solid media is, however, much more satisfactory: a sample of earth is collected, dried, and triturated, and a small quantity sprinkled over the surface of ’ nutrient gelatine prepared for a plate-cultivation. In another method the gelatine is liquefied in a test-tube, the powder added, and distributed, in the usual way, throughout the medium, which is then poured out upon a glass plate or made into a roll-culture. In the same way the dust which settles from the air in houses and hospitals, or food substances in powder, may be distributed in nutrient gelatine, and examined both for aerobie and anaerobic bacteria. The different kinds which develop, must be thoroughly investigated as regards their morphological and biological charac- ters, and pathogenic properties. EXAMINATION OF AIR, SOIL, AND WATER. 145 WatTER. In the case of water, as in that of air, a knowledge of the micro-organisms which may be present is not only of interest. to the bacteriologist, but of the greatest importance in practical ‘ hygiene. Common putrefactive bacteria and vibrios may not be hurtful in themselves, but they indicate the probability of the presence of organic matter in which there may be danger. The detection of Bacillus coli communis may be taken to indicate a probable contamination with human excreta, The Microzyme Test which was introduced for the detection of putrefactive bacteria, consisted in adding three or four drops of the sample of water to 1 or 2 cc. of Pasteur’s fluid, the nourishing fluid having been previously boiled in a sterilised test-tube. If the microzymes or their germs existed in the water, the liquid in a few days became turbid from the presence of countless bacteria. This test is of no real value, for it does little more than indicate that bacteria are present, which we know to be the case in all ordinary water, and even in ice. On the other hand, the bacteriological test. of Koch is a most valuable addition to the usual methods of water analysis. It enables us not only to detect the presence of bacteria, but to ascertain approximately their number, and to study very minutely their morphological and biological characteristics. The -importance of a thorough acquaintance with the life-history of the individual micro-organisms cannot be too strongly insisted upon. For example, by such means the spirillum of Asiatic cholera can be distinguished from most other comma-shaped organisms, and inasmuch as its presence may be an indication of contamination with choleraic discharges, such water should be condemned for drinking purposes, even though we are not yet in a position to affirm that the microbe is the cause of the disease. The detection of the bacillus of typhoid fever or of the Bacillus coli communis in suspected water or milk would be evidence of considerable importance. Koch’s test, in short, consists in making plate-cultivations of a known volume of water, counting the colonies which develop, isolating the micro-organisms, and studying the characters of each individual form. Collection and Transport of Water Samples.—Sternberg’s bulbs, or Erlenmeyer’s conical flasks of about 100 cc. capacity, may be employed with advantage for collecting the samples of water. The latter are cleansed, plugged, and sterilised in the hot-air steriliser. 10 146 BACTERIOLOGY. When required for use, the plug is removed and held between the fingers, which must not touch the part which enters the neck of the flask. About 30 cc. of the water to be examined are intro- duced into the flask, and the plug must be quickly replaced and covered with a caoutchouc cap. If collected from a tap, the water should first be allowed to run for a few minutes, and the sample should be received into the flask without the neck coming into contact with the tap. From a reservoir or stream, the flasks may be filled by employing a sterilised pipette. During transport contact between the water and cotton-wool plug must be avoided, and if likely to occur the sample must be collected and forwarded in a Sternberg’s bulb. Examination by Plate-cultivation.—The apparatus for plate- cultivation should be arranged as already described. Crushed ice Fic. 74.—APpPARATUS FOR EsTIMATING THE NuMBER OF COLONIES IN A PLATE-CULTIVATION. may be added to the water in the glass dish to expedite the setting of the gelatine, so that the plate may be transferred as quickly as possible to the damp chamber. The caoutchouc cap is removed from the flask, and the cotton-wool plug singed in the flame to prevent contamination from adventitious germs on the outside of the plug. The flask is then held slantingly in the hand, and the plug twisted out and retained between the fingers. With a graduated pipette a measured quantity (2; or jy cc.) of the sample is transferred to a tube of liquefied nutrient gelatine, and the plugs of the flask and of the tube quickly replaced. If the water is very impure, it may be necessary to first dilute the sample with sterilised water. The inoculated tube must be gently inclined backwards and forwards, and rolled as already explained, to distribute the germs throughout the gelatine, and the gelatine finally poured on a plate. When the gelatine has set, the plate is transferred to a damp chamber, which should be carefully labelled and set aside in a place EXAMINATION OF AIR, SOIL, AND WATER. . 147 of moderate temperature. In about two or three days the cultivation may be examined. In some cases the colonies may be counted at once; more frequently they are so numerous that the plate must be placed on a dark background, and a special process resorted to. A glass plate, ruled by horizontal and vertical lines into centimetre squares, some of which are again subdivided into ninths, is so arranged on a wooden frame that it can cover the nutrient-gelatine plate without touching it (Fig. 74). A lens is used to assist in dis- covering minute colonies. If then the colonies are very numerous, the number in some small division is counted, if less in some large one, and an average is obtained from which the number of colonies on the entire surface is calculated. A separate calculation of the liquefied colonies should be also made, and their number, as well as the total number of colonies present in 1 cc. of the sample, recorded. Any peculiar macroscopical appearances, colours, etc., should be noted, and then the microscopical appearances of the colonies studied. Tastly, examination of the individual organisms should be made by cover-glass preparations, and by inoculation of nutrient gelatine, potatoes, and other media. Instead of plates, Petri’s dishes may be used both for gelatine and agar-agar cultivations. i Te ran : Nis : nara A ahi 2° @ bs @ & be ® ) 5 = o & hf), n° 8 A, 5 Fic. 75.—EsmMArcH’s Rouu-CuLtTure. at, India-rubber caps; b 6 b, longitudinal line drawn on the tube; ¢,c,c, transverse lines for counting colonies (FRANKLAND). Another plan is to take a measured quantity of the sample of water and prepare a roll-culture, using a large-sized test-tube (Fig. 75). The colonies can be counted with the aid of a lens (Fig. 76). Microscopical preparations and sub-cultures can be made from the colonies, and the anaerobic bacteria can be examined by Frinkel’s modification of this method (p. 131). A drop of the sample of water may also be added to liquefied nutrient gelatine in a test-tube, the organisms distributed, and the gelatine allowed to solidify in the tube. A rough comparison of water samples may be made in this way. Microscopic Examination.—A drop of the water may be mounted and examined without staining; or allowed to evaporate on a cover- 148 BACTERIOLOGY. glass, which is then passed through the flame, and stained in the usual manner. Parietti’s Method.—As typhoid fever bacilli are apt to be crowded out by more rapidly growing micro-organisms, some method had to be devised for restraining the growth of the latter, and Chantemesse and Widal suggested the use of carbolic acid. Parietti put this into practice by the method he introduced. This consists in adding to tubes of broth about five drops of a mixture composed of sterilised water (100 parts), hydrochloric. acid (4 parts), and carbolic acid (5 parts). The tubes are first tested by incubation, and are then ready for use. A few drops of the suspected water are added Fic. 76.—APPARATUS FOR COUNTING COLONIES IN A ROLL CULTURE. to the broth, and if it becomes turbid in a day or two the typhoid fever bacillus is present in the form of a pure-culture. An excess of bacteria in a fresh sample indicates an excess of organic matter, and points to possible contamination with sewage. Where there is such contamination we are very likely to find pathogenic bacteria; and moreover impure water is a constant source of danger, for if the contagia of infectious diseases are introduced they will retain their vitality in such water for a long period, and will in some cases even multiply, whereas the same organisms introduced into pure water would in a short time perish. The actual number of bacteria in water is not of very great importance, and it must be remembered that if a sample is set aside for a few days there will be an enormous increase in the number of bacteria present ; but in dealing with perfectly fresh samples it EXAMINATION OF AIR, SOIL, AND WATER. 149 may be said that water containing less than 100 bacteria to the cubic centimetre is very pure water. Water containing 1,000 or more should be filtered. Water containing 100,000 to 1,000,000 is contaminated with surface water or sewage. It is necessary to bear in mind that in typhoid fever and Asiatic cholera the excreta contain the bacteria in great numbers, and wells and streams receiving surface water may be contaminated in various ways. The cholera bacillus dies as a rule quickly in distilled water, while it preserves its vitality for a long time in water of a bad quality. It is necessary to lay stress upon the fact that a bacterio- logical analysis may show the presence of pathogenic bacteria when their detection is not possible by any other means. They may be present in water in such small numbers that no chemical analysis would detect any contamination, but as they are living organisms capable of increasing in a suitable environment, they can readily be discovered by bacteriological methods. The examination of rain water, drinking water, tap water, sea water, various liquids and infusions, by these methods, opens up a wide field for research. Pettenkofer has shown that impregna- tion of water containing many bacteria with carbonic acid diminishes the number of the latter. The examination of waters before and after filtration, or after addition of chemical substances, are matters which require further investigation, though a great deal of work has already been accomplished. The reader will find in Micro-organisms in Water by P. and G. Frankland, a very complete account of this subject with valuable analytical tables. CHAPTER XII. PHOTOGRAPHY OF BACTERIA. TueE production of pictures of microscopic objects by photographic means was attempted at an early date. Some authorities regard the very earliest recorded experiments as being the first experi- ments alike in photography and micro-photography. The experi- ments of Wedgwood and Sir Humphry Davy were embodied in a paper read before the Royal Institution in 1802. They obtained with the solar microscope impressions upon paper, and with greater success upon white leather, though the results were transitory when exposed to daylight. In 1816 Nicéphore Niepce described his experiments in con- nection with fixing the image obtained by the camera. He was at first only able to obtain negatives, and these were transitory. But, after joining with Daguerre, who had been experimenting in the same direction, a process was invented which was published in 1839 under the name of daguerreotype. This invention, and the rapid improvements which followed, were taken advantage of by Reade, Donné, Hodgson, Kingsley, and Talbot, who were early workers in the field of micro-photography. So early as 1845 it is stated that Donné produced a work illustrated with engravings copied from daguerreotypes. Subsequently this interesting branch of photography was taken up by many in France and Germany, in America, and in England. Of those to whom we are indebted for the literature of the subject, and for many improvements, the names of Wenham, Dancer, Draper, Maddox, Shadbolt, Redmayne, Woodward, Highley, Deecke, Moitessier, Gerlach, Koch, Sternberg, Frankel, Pfeiffer, and Pringle may especially be mentioned. Of these workers the name of Woodward stands pre-eminently foremost. His skill in microscopical manipulations, combined with access to the very best apparatus and objectives, placed at 150 PHOTOGRAPHY OF BACTERIA. 151 his disposal in the Museum at Washington, enabled him to obtain photographs of diatoms which probably have never been surpassed. To Koch belongs the credit of being the first to extend the application of micro-photography to the delineation of bacteria. A series of instructive photographs was first published by him in 1877. These were photographs of cover-glass preparations, and all admirably illustrated the subjects from which they were taken; while two, showing the flagella of bacilli and spirilla, were triumphs in this new departure. Lewis, in India, was one of the first to illustrate his writings on the subject of micro-organisms by means of photographs. About the same time Sternberg, in America, took some excellent photographs of bacteria. Heliotype reproductions of these were published in 1884. Hauser and Van Ermengem and many other bacteriologists successfully resorted to photography for illustrating their researches, and Frinkei and Pfeiffer’s, and Itzerott and Niemann’s atlases of photographs of bacteria, in microscopical specimens and cultivations, are especially worthy of mention. Opinions have differed widely as to the merits of photographic illustrations. Many, taking the standpoint solely of a comparison with drawings, have decried their use. By judging from such a comparison alone the real value of photographs may be lost sight of. On the other hand, many who have looked at the question from all sides, have been led to value even a defective photograph more than an ordinary drawing. In his first publication on this subject, Koch strongly advocated photography on the ground that illustrations would then be as true to nature as possible. The photographs which accompanied his paper were all taken from preparations of bacteria which had been made from blood, cultivations, or infusions, by drying a thin layer on a cover-glass and staining, or from specimens prepared in the same way but left unstained. But when, having committed himself to this opinion, Koch attempted, later, to photograph the bacteria in animal tissues, he was led to modify his previous conclusion. For though no trouble was spared, yet disappointing results were met with. This was owing, he explains, to the fact that the smallest and most interesting bacteria can only be made visible in animal tissues by staining them, and thus obtaining the advantage of colour. This introduced the same difficulties which are met with in photographing coloured objects, such as tapestry and oil paintings. 152 BACTERIOLOGY. As these difficulties had been to a certain extent obviated by the use of eosin-collodion, Koch adopted the same method for photo- graphing stained bacteria. By the use of eosin-collodion, and by shutting off portions of the spectrum by coloured glasses, he succeeded in obtaining photographs of bacteria which had been stained with blue and red aniline dyes. But, owing to the long exposure which was necessary, and the unavoidable vibrations of the apparatus, the results were so wanting in definition that they not only proved unsatisfactory as substitutes for drawings, but did not in some cases give any evidence of what was to be seen in the preparations. Koch, in consequence, stated that he would abstain from publishing photographic illustrations until he had the advantage of improved methods. We find, however, in spite of this, that in 1881 Koch published a series of reproductions from his negatives in illustration of what could be accomplished by photography. Here again we find that many of the photographs of cover- glass preparations were admirable, but those of tissue-sections gave evidence of the difficulties Koch encountered, and were undoubtedly unsatisfactory from the want of flatness of field, some of the ilustrations recalling rather a map of a mountainous country than a microscopical preparation. , In consequence of the difficulties met with in attempting to photograph bacteria stained with the aniline dyes most commonly used, Koch recommended that the preparations should be stained brown, pointing out as his reason that, though the bright and concentrated colour of the red and blue aniline dyes catches the eye far more readily than the somewhat sombre brown colours, yet no one up to the time of his publication had succeeded in obtaming good photographs of bacteria which had been stained either blue or red, and mounted in Canada balsam, while there was no difficulty in obtaining photographic representations of prepara- tions stained yellow or brown. Though this stain could be easily employed in most cover-glass preparations, it was by no means easy to obtain a good differential stain of bacteria in the tissues by employing Bismarck brown. An attempt was, therefore, made to photograph preparations stained blue and red by the aid of the dry-plate process, and by interposing glasses of suitable tints. After many fruitless experi- ments this method had to be abandoned, and the method of staining the object brown was adopted. In many cases this gave excellent PHOTOGRAPHY OF BACTERIA. : 153 results; in others again, compared with the results of staining with blue or red stains, there was much to be desired, and further improvement was needed. That a stain, such as yellow or brown, must be employed which absorbs the blue rays, and acts on the sensitive plate like black, which absorbs all the light, constituted the first condition laid down by Koch as an essential for success. It was further pointed out that the suitability of the stain could be ascertained by first passing the light, to illuminate the preparation, through a solution of ammonio-sulphate of copper, under which condition the bacteria would appear black on a blue ground. The second condition was, that sunlight must be employed, but that direct projection upon the object was disadvantageous, and it must, therefore, be diffused by the interposition of one or more plates of ground glass. Lastly, an illuminating condenser was recommended, of such construction that the diffused sunlight brightly illuminates the object from all sides. Sternberg encountered the same difficulty in photographing red, blue or violet preparations, while he produced excellent pictures of preparations stained with aniline brown, or a weak solution of iodine (iodine grs. iij, potassic iodide grs. v, distilled water grs. 200). Thus the results of a large number of attempts to photograph the tubercle bacillus in sputum, only ended in producing such extremely faint impressions, that any one unacquainted with the object as seen under the microscope could form scarcely any idea of its form or minute structure with even an accompanying explanation and the closest inspection of the photograph. Dufrenne, in attempting to photograph the same object by the ordinary method, found the plates were uniformly acted on, or the image was so faint, or so lacking in contrast, that they were useless for obtaining proofs on paper or glass. By interposing green glass between the objective and the sensitive plate, so that the red rays were absorbed, while the green rays passed through and acted on the plate, he states that better results were obtained. The work of Hauser illustrated the great value of photography in the production of pictures of impression-preparations and colonies in nutrient gelatine. To give the general effect, as well as faithfully reproduce the minute details in these difficult subjects would in most eases create insurmountable difficulties, except to the most accom- plished draughtsman. Hauser employed Gerlach’s apparatus and Schleussner’s dry 154 BACTERIOLOGY. plates, and obtained the illumination by means of a small incan- descent lamp, which gave a strong, white light, with three or four Bunsen elements. In another respect Hauser’s results were of practical value. The preparations to be photographed were stained brown as recommended by Koch, but they were mounted in the ordinary way in Canada balsam. The objection to the mounting medium most commonly employed was thus set aside. The prevalent idea, however, that the preparations must be stained brown was still a formidable obstacle, and the way out of this difficulty was clearly shown by Van Ermengem’s photographs. These were pictures of comma-bacilli which had been stained with fuchsine and methyl violet. These photographs afforded the first practical illustration of the value of isochromatic plates in micro-photography which had been previously noted by Van Ermengem in 1884, and their intro- duction marks a distinct era in the progress of micro-photography. A short explanation may be given of what is meant by isochro- matic, or what have been more properly termed orthochromatic dry plates. The difficulties encountered in photographing certain stained preparations have been mentioned. It is a familiar fact that in portraits, blue or violet comes out almost or quite white, while other colours, such as yellow, are represented by a sombre shade or perhaps black. This failure in correctly translating colours is explained by the want of equality between the strength of the. chemical and luminous rays. If the rays of the spectrum are pro- jected upon a photographically sensitive surface, the greatest effect is found to take place at the violet end. In other words, the violet and blue rays are more actinic or chemically powerful, while the yellow and orange have scarcely any effect. The dyes employed in staining give corresponding results: blue and violet give but a faint impression, yellow and orange a black picture. These results are most clearly demonstrated in a photograph of an oil painting taken in the ordinary way ; and they led to experiments being made which have resulted in orthochromatic photography. The effect of interposing coloured glasses has already been referred to. It was found later that, if plates were coloured yellow, e.g., with turmeric, the blue and violet rays were intercepted, and their actinism reduced. In 1881, Tailfer and Clayton produced the so-called isochromatic plates. The emulsion of bromide of silver and gelatine was stained with eosin, and it was claimed that colours would be represented with their true relative intensity. Chlorophyll and other stains have been tried, and by such methods the ordinary gelatine dry plates can be so treated that they will reproduce latte gm PHOTOGRAPHY OF BACTERIA. 155 various colours, according to their relative light intensity, and thus be rendered iso- or, what is now more commonly known as, ortho- chromatic. APPARATUS AND MATERIAL. Micro-photographic Apparatus.—As is well known, various forms of apparatus have from time to time been recommended and em- ployed by different workers. Many use the microscope in a vertical position, with the camera superposed or fitted to the eye-piece end of the microscope tube; or the microscope tube may be screwed off from the body of the microscope, and a pyramidal camera adjusted in its place, the base of the pyramid being represented by the ground glass screen. Others again prefer that the microscope and camera should be arranged horizontally. In another form the ordinary microscope is dispensed with, the objective, stage, and mirror are adapted to the front of the camera, and provided with suitable arrangements for holding the object, supporting the mirror, and adjusting the different parts. Lastly, the camera may be dispensed with, the operating-room, which must be rendered impervious to light, taking its place, while the image is projected and focussed upon a ground glass screen, which has a separate support.* The horizontal position affords greater stability than the vertical, so that the former is to be preferred. The vertical model with the camera fixed to the microscope is particularly to be avoided, as the weight of the camera bears directly upon the microscope, and must affect the fine adjustment, and any vibration in one part of the apparatus is communicated throughout. The simplest apparatus consists of a camera fixed upon a base- board four or five feet in length, upon which the microscope can be clamped, and which carries also a lamp and a bull’s-eye condenser (Fig. 77). Simplicity and economy must always be borne in mind in recommending any apparatus of this kind, for to insist upon the “necessity of a very elaborate apparatus, or a specially fitted-up room, or that a special room should be built with windows facing in a definite direction, will in most cases at once place photography beyond the reach of those who might otherwise employ it. Yet to fulfil * For an excellent account of the forms of apparatus which have been employed by different workers the reader is referred to the section on Micro- photography in Beale’s How to work with the Microscope. 156 BACTERIOLOGY. all the purposes for which the apparatus may be required, including the employment of the highest powers, and also that one may be enabled to work for long intervals of time with due comfort, an accurate and complete apparatus will be found to be most desirable. Though most preparations will admit of being photographed when the stage of the microscope is vertical, yet if we require to photograph micro-organisms in liquids, or colonies upon partially liquefied gelatine, the apparatus must admit of being placed so that the stage of the microscope becomes horizontal. In addition, the apparatus is rendered somewhat complex if we employ powerful TTT IMCS Fic. 77.—HorizontaL Mick0-PHOTOGRAPHIC APPARATUS. artificial light. Sunlight, no doubt, is the best and cheapest, but it is not always available, especially in a city like London; and, moreover, evenings and dull days will probably be the very time which can be best spared for this work. We must, therefore, fall back upon the paraffine lamp, or the magnesium, oxyhydrogen, or electric light. To fulfil all these conditions Swift has constructed an apparatus under the author’s directions (Fig. 78). It is merely a modification of the ordinary horizontal model, which admits of being readily placed PHOTOGRAPHY OF BACTERIA. 157 in the vertical position, while the illumination is supplied from an oxyhydrogen lantern. To place the apparatus in the vertical position two small hinged ‘SALVUVddW OlHAVUDOLOHA-OWOIP AIAISUAATY—'S) “OLA brackets, at the end distant from the camera, are forced up with a smart blow of the hand. The corresponding ends of the stretcher bars are dislodged from their fittings, and allowed to descend ; when 158 BACTERIOLOGY. horizontal, the opposite extremities of the bars are easily released from their sockets. The leg or support at this end can then be Fie. 79,—REVERSIBLE Mick0-PHOTOGRAPHIC APPARATUS ARRANGED IN THE VERTICAL POSITION. turned up and fixed underneath the apparatus by a button, and the end of the apparatus itself gently lowered to the ground. PHOTOGRAPHY OF BACTERIA. 159 A hinged end-piece is also to be turned out to increase the base upon which the whole apparatus will stand when raised to the vertical. The two-legged support at the opposite end of the apparatus is next worked down by a quick thread screw, and on raising the apparatus to the vertical, the two-legged support drops to the ground, and assists in maintaining the stability of the whole. If it is thought necessary, a simple means can be readily devised for clamping the apparatus, in either position, to the wall of the room, so as to eliminate as much as possible all chances of vibration. A second quick thread screw moves the base-board upon which the _camera and central sliding-board are mounted, so that the camera, muicroscope and lantern can be raised to a convenient height from the ground. The various parts of this apparatus. may be described in detail. The Microscope and its Attachments.—It is most essential that the microscope should be perfectly steady. The microscope was made by Zeiss, and to ensure steadiness, the horse-shoe footpiece fits under a projecting ledge, and is then clamped by a cross-piece, so that it is firmly fixed. The microscope with the means for clamping it and the oxy- hydrogen lantern are carried upon an independent sliding-board, which admits of movement to or from the camera. Thesliding-board also moves upon a centre, which enables the microscope to be turned out from the median line; in fact, to be turned at aright angle to the position it occupies when ready for the exposure. The object of this contrivance is to enable the operator to sit down by the side of the apparatus, and with comfort to arrange the object in the field of the microscope. On turning the microscope back into the median line, it is fixed in the optical axis of the apparatus by means of a suitable stop. The sliding-board is provided with a small grooved wheel receiving an endless cord, made of silk or fishing-line, which passes round the grooved, milled head of the fine adjustment of the microscope. When the: slidmg-board is returned to the median line of the apparatus, the milled wheel connected with the fine adjustment impinges upon the wheel of the long focussing rod. The latter is provided with an india-rubber tire, which grips the teeth of the milled wheel, and thus the long focussing rod is placed in connection with the fine adjustment of the microscope. Illumination.—The oxy-hydrogen lamp has been more frequently employed by the author than the paraffine lamp, partly on account of the diminished time in exposure, especially when employing very BACTERIOLOGY. 160 PHOTOGRAPHY OF BACTERIA. 161 high powers ; this is of great importance where there is likely to be vibration from passing traffic. With rapid plates and the highest powers, the exposure has only been two or three seconds, whereas with the paraffine lamp it may vary from three to ten minutes, or even longer. Walmsley gives the following table for exposures with the paraffine lamp :— 14 inch objective 3 to 45 seconds. aa - € 5-90e 3 aa» is 3 ,, 3 minutes. Beg 3 2 55 TF ; to ” ” 4 ” 10 ” The illuminating apparatus represented in the accompanying engraving (Fig. 78) consists of a lantern which not only moves together with the microscope on the central sliding-board, but can be moved independently to or from the microscope, and be clamped with screws at the requisite distance for obtaining the best illumination. It is provided with two 3-inch condensing lenses of long focus, constructed of optical glass, which is much whiter than that used for ordinary lantern condensers. The lime-cylinders should be of the hardest and best quality, as they give a more actinic light than those made of soft lime. The “ Excelsior” lime-cylinders are strongly recommended. They are.supplied in hermetically sealed tins which can be easily opened and re-sealed, so that a cylinder can be taken out and used, and the rest preserved for a future occasion. The hydrogen can be obtained by using the coal-gas supplied to the house, and the oxygen should be supplied preferably in a compressed state in iron bottles. Not only are the bottles much less cumbrous than the bags, but a small quantity of gas can be used, and the residue left for an indefinite time; moreover, the gas is always at hand to be turned on when required. On the other hand, the retention of unused gas in bags is liable to cause their corrosion, owing, it is belieyed, to impurities which are carried over in the manufacture of the oxygen. If gas is not laid on in the house, then it also must be procured in a compressed state in bottles. As the blow-over jet is recommended on account of its safety, the bottles should be supplied in this case with a supplementary valve. It is then just as easy and free from danger to employ the compressed gas as it is to make use of the house-supply. The Camera.—A. long-focus, half-plate camera is mounted upon a sliding platform. This admits of the camera being pushed up to ll 162 BACTERIOLOGY. the microscope when it is in the long axis of the apparatus, so as to make a light-tight combination, The opening which is filled in an ordinary camera by the lens can be shut off by means of an internal shutter, which is opened and closed by turning a screw at the side of the camera. The dark-back is provided with plate-carriers, so that either half, quarter, or lantern-size plates can be employed. It will be found convenient to have two or more dark-backs, so that several plates may be exposed without rearranging the light for each exposure, Much more elaborate and expensive micro-photographic cameras have been constructed by Zeiss, and also by Swift. The latter has Fic. 81.—PHoToGRAPH Or AN IMPRESSION PREPARATION. carried out a suggestion made by Pringle for a support at the ocular end (Fig. 80). The Dark-room.—In every bacteriological laboratory there should be a developing room provided with shelves, gas, water-tap, and sink, but these arrangements are not absolutely indispensable. All that is essential is a room impervious to light; and a closet or cupboard, if it can be ventilated, will answer perfectly well, with a jug and basin instead of the tap and sink. The steam-steriliser employed in the preparation of nutrient media for cultivating bacteria, if not required at the time for such purposes, may be filled to the brim with water, and will form an excellent cistern and tap, while a pail, or small sanitary bin, may be utilised as a sink. Various kinds of lamps are made for the dark-room, burning PHOTOGRAPHY OF BACTERIA. 163 either candles, oil, or gas. In any case, the light must pass through two thicknesses of ruby glass. Dry Plates—A small supply of any of the ordinary plates in the market may be procured for preliminary trials in acquiring a knowledge of the processes ; but to overcome the difficulties of certain stained preparations, the isochromatic or orthochromatic plates should be used. The 7 plate will be found to be the most suitable size. There are numerous formule for the requisite solutions for developing and fixing the negatives, and instructions are usually enclosed. in the boxes of dry plates, but it is best to abstain from trying a number of different formule, as it leads to a great expendi- ture of time. There is a temptation to do this, it being supposed that there is probably some great advantage in one formula over another. It is much better to get accustomed to the behaviour under different exposures of one, or perhaps two methods. In France the iron developer is much in vogue, and is recom- mended by Tailfer and Clayton for use with their isochromatic plates. It has the advantage of great simplicity in the mode of employment, and, therefore, is very suitable for a beginner. In England, on the other hand, the alkaline developer is very much used, as it gives more command over the plate, enabling the photographer more fully to compensate for incorrect exposure. It is very desirable before attempting to take photographs with the microscope to learn how to take photographs with an ordinary landscape camera, and to get thoroughly accustomed to the use of some good developer, so that mistakes may be corrected and the clearest and sharpest negatives obtained. PracticaL ManipuLation. Arrangement of Apparatus.—For working with the paraffine lamp, the mode of procedure is, as regards the illumination, briefly as follows. The sub-stage condenser is dispensed with when a low power is employed, as well as the mirror, and the lamp is so placed that the image of the flat of the flame appears accurately in the centre of the field of the microscope. A bull’s-eye condenser is then interposed, so that the image of the flame disappears, and the whole field is equally illuminated. With high powers the sub-stage achromatic condenser is necessary, and a more intense illumination is obtained by using the flame edgewise. In using a low power with the oxyhydrogen light, the lantern is withdrawn some little distance from the microscope, and the top combination of the achromatic condenser removed. 164 BACTERIOLOGY. It is best to begin with the use of a low power, and a trial object, such as the blow-fly’s tongue, spine of Echinus, or trachea of silkworm. In order to explain the management of the apparatus (as represented in Fig. 78) the steps in the arrangement of the apparatus and exposure of the plate will be described in detail for the employment of a high power and the oxyhydrogen light. The solutions being ready for use, it is proposed to take a photograph of tubercle bacilli in sputum, with a ~, apochromatic oil-immersion objective. The first point to claim attention is the arrangement “of the light. Having lighted the gas at the hydrogen jet, the lime-cylinder should be revolved until heated equally all round. The oxygen is then carefully turned on until only a small spot of incandescence is produced. The central sliding-board is turned out, a low power screwed on to the microscope, and the image of the bright spot focussed and accurately centered. To protect the sight, an eye-piece provided with a smoked glass shade is used. The immersion objective is then substituted for the low power, and the oxygen turned on until the right admixture of gas is obtained to produce a brilliant illumination. It is well at this stage to sit down to focus the selected object, and to spend some little time in searching for the most characteristic part of the specimen to be photographed. This being decided upon, the eye- piece is carefully withdrawn, and the central sliding-board rotated back into the median line. To make a light-tight connection between the camera and the microscope, the camera is pushed up until a velvet-lined tube, which occupies the position of the lenses of an ordinary camera, is enclosed within a short wide tube which is adapted to the eye-piec2 end of the microscope. On opening the camera-shutter the image will be projected upon the ground glass screen of the camera. It is necessary, however, to obtain the exact focus, and to effect this the ground-glass screen is turned away, and the dark-back with a piece of plain glass is substituted. Here again time may be well spent in getting the sharpest image, with the aid of a focussing glass of proper focal length. The greatest delicacy in manipulation is necessary, as in working with such high powers a turn too much of the fine adjustment will cause the image to vanish. Having determined the best visual focus, which will be found with the high-power objectives of most makers to correspond with the chemical focus, the dark-back must be cautiously removed, to prevent any vibration, and the plain PHOTOGRAPHY OF BACTERIA. 165 glass replaced by a sensitive plate. To effect this change, the operator retires to the dark-room, and opens a box of plates with as little exposure to the red light as possible. Having removed a plate, it is necessary to ascertain which is the sensitive side. This may be done by momentarily exposing it to the red light, and seeing which is the sensitive side by the dull appearance of the film. A less satisfactory way is to moisten the tip of a finger, and press it at one corner of the plate. The film side will be recognised by imparting a sticky sensation. The film must be dusted with a camel’s-hair brush, as well as the dark-back, and the plate is placed film-side downwards in the dark-back, which is then securely closed. Care should be taken that the plates then remaining in the box are packed away before light is admitted to the dark-room. Exposure of the Plate-—On returning to the apparatus, the camera-shutter is closed. Then the dark-back is gently slid into its place, and its slide withdrawn. A few moments are allowed to elapse, so that the least possible vibration, which might be caused by inserting the dark-back, has had time to cease, and all is ready for the exposure. In the case of the object we have selected, three seconds will probably be the exposure required. ‘This is done by opening and closing the camera-shutter with one hand, while a watch can be held in the other. The slide of the dark-back is then carefully closed, and the plate is ready to be carried off to the developing room. : As the light will not be again required until the next exposure, the oxygen must be turned off, while the coal-gas may be allowed to play over the lime. Development and Fixation of the Image.—It is well to be systematic, and therefore, before the plate is taken out of the dark-back, light is admitted to the dark-room, and everything arranged so that the position of the trays and bottles may be remembered in the dark. First, let the ruby lamp be lit, place two dishes or trays close by, and a row of four dishes within easy reach. Pour out some fixing solution in the first porcelain dish, alum in No. 2, and water in Nos. 3 and 4, Put the necessary quantity of “pyro” solution into the glass measure, and place it with the ammonia drop-bottle in front of the ruby light. Then, when all light except that from the ruby lantern has been excluded, everything is ready to commence the development of the plate. \ 166 BACTERIOLOGY. Opening the dark-back, the plate may be turned out on to the palm of the hand. The film side is then uppermost, and the plate is to be transferred in the same position to a tray, and covered with water. This is to soak the film and obtain an equal action of the developer ; or the solution of fresh pyro may be poured on to the plate without previous soaking, if the flow is uniform, and the formation of bubbles avoided. In the first case the water is run off and the pyro allowed to flow evenly over the plate. To protect the plate from prolonged exposure to the ruby light, a second tray may be inverted over it, or the developing tray covered with a piece of card-board. Gently rock the tray for a minute or so, then to a few drops of ammonia in a measuring glass add the pyro from the developing tray, and pour the mixture back again over the plate. After again gently rocking the tray for a few minutes, more ammonia is added by drops in the same way. If the exposure has been properly timed,—and the time necessary must be ascertained by trial for each preparation,—the image will gradually begin to appear, and the action must be allowed to continue until sufficient density has been obtained. To determine this requires some experience. It is generally recommended to take the plate out of the tray and hold it for a moment, film-side towards the operator, in front of the ruby light. Though the plate is not nearly so sensitive when the image has commenced to develop, and there is, therefore, not the same danger of fogging, a safer plan is to occasionally turn the plate film downwards in the tray, and when the image appears on the back the development will be found to be completed. With such a preparation as tubercle bacilli in sputum it is not easy to trace the gradual formation of the image, and hence the advantage of commencing with a well-marked object such as the blow-fly’s tongue. It is then easy to watch the gradual progress of the image. The bright parts or high-lights appear first, then gradually the half-tones, or less brightly-lighted parts, and lastly every shade except the deepest shadows is represented. When, however, all action seems to have ceased, we must still wait until we have judged, in the manner already described, that the density is sufficient. This being determined, we pour off the developing solution and thoroughly wash the plate with water. It is then ready to be placed in dish No. 1, containing “hypo,” and here it must be left for some minutes after all appearance of creaminess has disappeared from the back. White light may now be admitted, the plate removed from the hypo and thoroughly washed under the tap, PHOTOGRAPHY OF BACTERIA. 167 and then placed in dish No. 2. When another plate is ready to take its place, transfer it to dish No. 3, and then to No. 4, and, after a good final washing under the tap, place it upon a rack to dry. If there is any tendency for the film to detach itself from the plate, ‘to frill,” the alum bath must be used before fixing, as well as after. Frilling or blistering may be due to an error in manufacture, and is liable to occur in hot weather, or when using a developer too strong in ammonia. If it occurs during washing or fixing, the alum bath must be employed before the hypo. ogging, or the appear- ance of a veil over the plate, may arise from error in the manu- facture, from admission of extraneous light, from over-exposure, or from prolonged exposure to the ruby light during development. Care must be taken that the camera and dark-room are light-tight. Crystalisation, or powdery deposit, upon the negative when dry, is due to insufficient washing out of the hyposulphite of soda. Thin- ness of the image, or want of density, may be due to insufficient development, too weak a developer, or too short or too long an exposure. Too great density results from too long immersion in the developer. Spots may sometimes occur upon the negatives. They may be caused by dust upon the plate or by air bubbles in the developer. In the text-books of photography full accounts of failures will be found, their causes and prevention; but it will be advantageous when these difficulties are encountered to take the negatives to a skilled photographer and get advice upon them. It is necessary to persevere, and not be disheartened if several negatives have to be made of a preparation before a successful result is obtained. It may here be remarked that the beginner will far more rapidly learn the technique if he avail himself of a practical demon- stration from a photographer. When he has learnt to obtain suc- cessful negatives, if he prefer silver prints, and time is an object, it will be found to be true economy to get the printing and mounting done by a professional photographer. The credit of a successful photograph of bacteria is due to the bacteriologist who prepares the microscopical specimen and obtains the negative. Determination of the Amplification.—The amplification varies not only with the objective employed, but with the distance of the focussing screen from the object. In order to ascertain the amplification afforded by a certain objective at a certain distance, a photograph should be taken, under the same conditions, of the lines of a micrometer slide. It is easy then to calculate the amplification 168 BACTERIOLOGY. obtained in the micro-photograph ; supposing, for example, in the micro-photograph the lines which are 759 inch apart are delineated 1 inch apart, the magnifying power must be 1,000 diameters. Moreover, having thus ascertained the amplification, we can accurately compute from the photograph the size of the objects taken. Value of Photographs.—It is not necessary to compare the relative merits of diagrams and photographs. Diagrams which do not purport to be accurate representations, but are intentionally the means for simplifying instruction, ‘4 will always be valuable, even if we have the original preparations under the microscope before cle us. We must consider the relative merits of photographs and of drawings which purport to be exact representations of what is seen under the microscope. Thus in the case of micro-organisms, when their biological characters are studied under low powers of the microscope, photographs are preferable because they give a more faithful re- presentation. At the same time, apart from this comparative value, we must not lose sight of the actual value of photography in placing within the reach of the student or investigator, who may not be a draughtsman, a most valuable means for illustrating all kinds of preparations. For double-stained or triple-stained tissue pre- parations an accurately coloured drawing leaves Fic. 82. — Puoto- GRAPH OF A ; ‘ s Currivation or little to be desired; but if we reproduce the same Bacittus = AN- by a wood engraving, and so lose the advantage kr ics of the coloured picture, which is instructive in indicating the method of staining, a photograph will, in many cases, be far more satisfactory. When we have to deal with the growth of bacteria en masse, as in test-tube and plate-cultivations, with colonies as seen under a low power of the microscope, and with impression-prepara- tions both under low and high powers, unless the bacteriologist is a most accomplished draughtsman as well as an accurate and reliable observer, photography undoubtedly affords the best mode of illustration. The apparatus being ready and at hand, a negative can be produced in a few minutes of a preparation which, from the amount of detail it contains, would take perhaps several hours to draw and colour. From that negative any number of facsimiles can PHOTOGRAPHY OF BACTERIA. 169 be obtained, whereas an original drawing, even in the best hands, if cut on wood or lithographed, is almost certain to fall short of being an exact copy. With regard to individual bacteria, the result is more satisfactory in many cases than a drawing; for there is the advantage of being absolutely certain that any particular structure, form, or shape which may be represented is actually what exists, and not what may have been evolved by unconscious bias in the mind of the observer. Many illustrations might be given of this. Thus Lewis, who was a most conscientious observer, published an account of organisms in the blood of rats in India, and illustrated it with a wood engraving and with micro-photographs. The identity of the organisms which were found in the common brown rat of this country was established much more readily from these photographs than from the wood engraving or the description in the letterpress. A micro-organism, even under the highest powers, appears as so minute an object that to represent it in a drawing requires a very delicate touch, and it is only too easy to make a picture which gives an erroneous impression to those who have not seen the original. If, on the other hand, to represent the object more clearly we draw an enlarged picture, we can only do so by repre- senting what we think the object would be like if it could be amplified to the size represented. In such cases a photographic enlargement is certainly more valuable. Photography enables us also to record rapid changes, and it is possible that as the art advances we may find that the film is more sensitive than the human retina, and brings out details in bacteria which would be otherwise unseen. Photographs can be readily transmitted by post, and when we can neither make a great number of preparations to illustrate some object, nor perhaps be able to go to the expense of having a drawing reproduced, this method will be of value in enabling others to benefit by our observations. The author is convinced that if the employment of photography is encouraged in bacteriological and other research laboratories for depicting microscopical preparations and cultivations of bacteria, the results of increasing experience and practice will lead to its being made more general use of as a faithful and graphic method, valuable alike for class demonstrations and for illustrating publications. PART ILI. ETIOLOGY AND PREVENTION OF INFECTIVE DISEASES. 171 CHAPTER XIII. SUPPURATION, PYAMIA, SEPTICEMIA, ERYSIPELAS. ABSCESS. WHEN inflammation is followed by an accumulation of leucocytes and of plasma which does not coagulate, the result is a white or creamy liquid called pus, and when the surrounding tissues are involved so that a cavity develops containing pus, we have what is termed an abscess. The almost constant association of bacteria with the production of pus has created a belief that they are the direct cause of suppuration. Ogston found micrococci present in all acute abscesses, and concluded that acute inflammation was invariably due to their presence. The fact that inflammation occurs more frequently in the external tissues of the body is accordingly explained by the ready entrance of bacteria which are in the air; and suppuration following pericarditis, pleurisy, and other conditions in which air is excluded is attributed to the presence of pyogenic cocci, which have gained access by the blood stream. There is no pyogenic organism constantly present, but several different species of bacteria have been isolated from pus and carefully studied, and the antiseptic treatment is based upon the principle of excluding bacteria in surgical operations, and destroying any which may have previously obtained access to wounds and broken surfaces. Inflamed tissue and pus form a most suitable medium for the growth of bacteria, which in some cases are unquestionably only accidental epiphytes, In tuberculosis, actinomycosis, and glanders, pus formation may take place without the presence of pyogenic cocci; and it is generally believed that chemical irritants, such as croton oil, turpentine, iodine, cadaverin, and tuberculin, will excite the formation of pus in the absence of bacteria, although Klemperer, after a number of very careful experiments, maintains that no genuine pus will be produced if the chemical irritants are first carefully sterilised. 173 ‘ 174 INFECTIVE DISEASES. The bacteria which have been isolated from pus include :— Staphylococcus pyogenes aureus, albus, and citreus, Staphylo- coccus cereus flavus and albus, Streptococcus pyogenes, Micrococcus pyogenes tenuis, Micrococcus pneumonie croupose, Bacillus pyo- cyaneus, Bacillus pyogenes fcetidus, Micrococcus tetragenus, Bacillus intracellularis meningitidis, Gonococcus, Bacillus septicus vesice, Urobacillus liquefaciens septicus, Bacillus typhosus, Bacillus coli communis, Bacillus anthracis, Bacillus tuberculosis, Bacillus mallei, and Actinomyces. Fic. 83.—SuPPURATION OF SUBCUTANEOUS TISSUE. d, Leucocyte containing micrococci; d’, leucocyte with pale nucleus showing necrosis; e, fixed connective tissue cells, much enlarged, containing several nuclei, of which some (n’) are pale and necrotic ; numerous cocci, diplococci, and short chains. (CoRNIL and RANVIER.) Some idea of the distribution of the bacteria most commonly occurring in pus may be gathered from the records made by Passet and by Karlinski. Passet examined acute abscesses, and found Staphylococcus pyogenes aureus and albus in 11 cases, Staphylococcus pyogenes albus alone in 4, Staphylococcus pyogenes albus and citreus in 2, Streptococcus pyogenes alone in 8, Staphylococcus pyogenes albus and Streptococcus pyogenes in 1, and Staphylococcus pyogenes albus and citreus, and Streptococcus pyogenes in 1. SUPPURATION, PYZMIA, SEPTICEMIA, ERYSIPELAS. 175 Karlinski tabulated his cases thus :— a} a , g lta gee |s2l2_iea| 2/43! & 82/88/95 198/35/38|s5| 8 g | 84) 85) 8<|88 38 |ke|/38| & DISEASE. & |B8|b8 |58 g 82/83) os a ae la8 (a8 | s5/88 (|ae/s2| 2 SP | sel so/ sh lee | wee | B ae | a = na ee & |e = é Mastitis . . 36 | 22] 4 4) 6) eyes |e Subcutaneous Abscess 30110] 2 8 6] 2 7 ee oe Phlegmon . i .| 24) —]—)]—] 24] —] —] - _ Furuncle ‘i 90° | 6) = | TO ea) a ee Bubo . ‘ Pe (is a ae a El a ee a ee Subperiosteal Abscess TO Ge) aes Oe i ee ee ee ee | Panaritium Cutaneum 16/ 7)—| S|) l— | = Panaritium Osseum : 100) 27 ee) OB eee | ee Se S| Dental Abscess . 10; 1/—) 4/ 1({ 38 A 4) Hordeolum F “40: | @ |= | ets pease || | 8h eee Abscess of the Middle Ear P a) Bae ae fee St |] 2 Carbuncle . 4) 2}/—,1 i ss || Osteomyelitis ens ee Bee es ee Total. . , 00°82) 7 3) 45l 6} 3214 Pyamia AND SEPTICEMIA. When pyogenic micrococci get access to the blood stream they may be carried into distant parts, and by multiplying produce meta- static abscesses in the lymphatic glands, bones, joints, and internal organs, a condition which is recognised as pyemia. If there is a general invasion of the blood stream by micrococci, and absorption of their poisonous products, septicemia results, and death may occur before the development of any secondary lesions. When septic micro-organisms multiply locally, and their chemical products are absorbed, or their products are separated from putrid material and injected into the circulation, the result may be called sapremia, The blood in septicemia contains living organisms, and is infective. The blood in sapremia contains only the toxic chemical products, and is not infective. The one is septic infection and the other septic intoxication. Pysemia may follow accidental wounds, surgical operations, parturition, acute suppuration of bones, scarlet fever, typhoid fever, and other diseases. To avoid pyemia in surgery and midwifery, the greatest care must be taken to prevent micro-organisms from being conveyed by instruments, sponges, bandages, and by the hands of the surgeon or the obstetric physician. By the use of antiseptics and absolute cleanliness the chances of infection are reduced to a minimum. 176 INFECTIVE DISEASES. Rosenbach examined six cases of metastatic pyemia: Strepto- coccus pyogenes was found five times, partly in the blood and partly in the metastatic deposits, and twice in company with Staphylococcus pyogenes aureus. Baumgarten, also, found Streptococcus pyogenes in the internal organs in pyeemic cases, and Hiselsberg found Streptococcus pyogenes in company with Staphylococcus pyogenes aureus in the blood of cases of septicaemia. ' Frinkel isolated a streptococcus from puerperal fever, which he at first called Streptococeus puerperalis, but subsequently identified with Streptococcus pyogenes. These researches have been confirmed by others. Winkel obtained a pure cultivation of a streptococcus from the blood of the heart in a case of puerperal peritonitis. It produced erysipelatous redness when inoculated in the rabbit’s ear, and in form and in cultivation was similar to the streptococcus in erysipelas. Cushing also found Streptococcus pyogenes associated with puerperal infection. The cocci were , found in endometritis diphtheritica as well as in secondary puerperal inflammation. These observations were still further confirmed by Baumgarten, and Bumm isolated the same organism in puerperal mastitis. Description oF Bacrerira In Pus. A description may now be given of the cocci most frequently found. Staphylococcus pyogenes aureus and albus and Strepto- ‘coceus pyogenes and Gonococcus are the most important of these. Staphylococcus pyogenes citreus, cereus albus and flavus, are pro- bably merely epiphytic. Micrococcus tetragenus, Micrococcus pyogenes tenuis, Bacillus pyogenes feetidus, Bacillus pyocyaneus, Bacillus coli communis, Bacillus septicus vesice, Urobacillus lique- faciens septicus, and Bacillus intracellularis meningitidis will be described fully in Part III. The description of Actinomyces, of Micrococcus pneumoniz croupose and of the bacilli of anthrax, tuberculosis, glanders, and typhoid fever, will be found in other chapters in Part JI. Staphylococcus pyogenes aureus (Rosenbach).—Yellow coccus in pus (Ogston). Cocci singly, in pairs, very short chains, and irregular masses. Cultivated on nutrient agar-agar, an orange- yellow culture develops, looking like a streak made with oil paint. One variety grows on nutrient gelatine without liquefying it; another produces rapid liquefaction, and the growth subsides as SUPPURATION, PYAMIA, SEPTICEMIA, ERYSIPELAS. 177 an orange-yellow sediment. On potatoes and blood serum a similar orange-yellow culture grows luxuriantly. They may also form colourless growths in sub-cultures, and are then indistinguishable from Staphylococcus pyogenes albus. The cocci do not cause any septic odour in pus, nor does any gas develop. Albumin is con- verted by their action into peptones. They produce rapid ammoniacal fer- : mentation in urine (Shattock). : ie The micro-organisms injected into the pleura or knee of a rabbit produce, = 4 asa rule, a fatal result on the following day ; but if it surviyes longer, it eventu- ally dies of severe phlegmon. Tf injected 2 Ges ae ieies into the knee of a dog, suppuration ip occurs, followed by disintegration of the ane) jot. Injected into the peritoneal fy6, 84,—Pus wire STaPHYLo- cavity of animals, they set up perito- coccr, x 800 (FLUGcE). nitis, and introduced into the jugular vein they produce septicemia and death. When a small quantity of a cultivation is introduced into the jugular vein after previous fracture or contusion of the bones of the leg, the animal dies in about ten days, and abscesses ave found in and around the bones, and in sonie cases in the lungs and kidneys, and the cocci are found — in the blood and pus. Garré caused sup- puration by inoculating a pure-culture in ‘a wound near his finger nail. Bockhart suffered from several pustules after vaccinating his arm witha pure-culture suspended in salt solu- tion, and Bumm gave himself a hypodermic Vic. 85.—Suscurannous Tissur ot A Rapsir 48 Hours arrer AN INJECTION OF STAPHYLOCOCCI, x 950 (BAUMGARTEN) ). injection of a pure- culture and produced an abscess. This micro- organism is practically ubiquitous. It has been cultivated from the skin and mucous membranes and secretions of healthy persons, and it occurs in the air, in soil, in dust, and in water, and in 12 178 INFECTIVE DISEASES. association with suppuration, pyemia, puerperal fever, and acute osteomyelitis. Staphylococcus pyogenes albus (Rosenbach).—Cocci micro- scopically indistinguishable from the above. In cultivations also they resemble Staphylococcus pyogenes aureus, but the growth consists of opaque white masses. They, as a rule, liquefy nutrient gelatine very rapidly, and subside to the bottom as a white sediment ; more rarely they liquefy very slowly ; and a variety has also been described which does not produce any liquefaction. They are similar to the above-mentioned in their pathogenic action. Pure-cultivations of the organism were obtained from a case of acute suppuration of the knee-joint. Staphylococcus pyogenes citreus (Passet).—Cocci singly, in pairs, very short chains, and irregular masses. If cultivated on nutrient gelatine or nutrient agar-agar, a sulphur or lemon-yellow growth develops. When inoculated under the skin of mice, guinea- pigs, or rabbits, an abscess forms after a few days, from which a fresh cultivation of the micro-organism can be obtained. Staphylococeus cereus albus (Passet).—Cocci, morphologic- ally similar to the above, but distinguished by forming on nutrient gelatine a white, slightly shining layer, like drops of stearine or wax, with somewhat thickened, irregular edges. In the depth of gelatine they form a greyish-white, granular ‘thread. In_plate-cultiva- tions, on the first day, white points are observed, which spread themselves out on the surface to spots of 1 to 2mm. When culti- vated on blood serum a_ greyish-white, slightly shining streak develops, and on potatoes the cocci form a layer which is similarly coloured. Staphylococcus cereus flavus (Passet).—Cocci which produce in nutrient jelly a growth which, at first white, becomes lemon- yellow, somewhat darker in colour than Staphylococcus pyogenes citreus. Microscopically Staphylococcus cereus flavus corresponds with Staphylococcus cereus albus. Inoculation experiments with both kinds give negative results. Streptococcus pyogenes (Rosenbach). << teed occurring singly, in masses, and in chains. The individual cocci are small spherical cells, with a special tendency after fission for the resulting elements to remain attached to each other, forming chains or rosaries. In cultures on solid media they often occur in the form of staphylococci, but in liquid cultures there may be a few, three or more elements, linked together ; or a great number , forming long chains which may be straight, serpentine, or twisted. DESCRIPTION OF PLATE IV. Streptococcus Pyogenes. Fig. 1.—From a cover-glass preparation of pus from a pyzmic abscess. Stained with gentian-violet by the method of Gram, and contrast-stained * with eosin. x 1200. Powell and Lealand’s apochromatic 7, Hom. imm. E. P. 10. Fig. 2.—From cover-glass preparations of artificial cultivations of the strepto- coccus in broth and in milk at different stages of growth. x 1200. Powell and Lealand’s apochromatic #; Hom. imm. E. P. 10. In these preparations there is a great diversity in size and form of the chains and their component elements. In the drawing examples are figured of the following: (a) Branched chains. (®) Simple chains composed of elements much smaller than the average size. (e) Chains with spherical and spindle-shaped elements at irregular intervals. These are conspicuous by their size, and are sometimes terminal, (d e) Chains in which the elements are more or less uniform in size. (f) Complex chains with elements dividing both longitudinally and transversely, and varying considerably in size in different lengths of the same chain. Plate IV Ce Pee pose eet: ’ gone “eee Fees! . oa” ae sailded 0 grnmonne sere i) Fig 2 STREPTOCOCCUS PYOGENES EM,Crockshank fecit, Vincent Brooks, Day & Son, lath. SUPPURATION, PY/EMIA, SEPTICEMIA, ERYSIPELAS. 179 The individual elements composing the chains will be found to vary considerably in size: here and there in a preparation will be found a chain composed of excessively small cocci, in another part the elements will be all on a larger scale, and again in another part they will be peculiarly conspicuous on account of their size. So great is the diversity in the size of the cocci in some of the chains, that one might imagine that there was more than one kind of streptococcus present in a preparation, until on examining some of the longest chains it is observed that various sizes are repre- sented in different lengths of the same chain. Very characteristic appearances result from the fact that the cocci enlarge and divide both longitudinally and transversely ; and, indeed, the largest, for the most part, clearly show a division in two directions, resulting in the formation of tetrads. In addition to the forms resulting from the fission of the cocci, there are here and there in a chain, and sometimes terminally, larger elements, which are spherical, spindle-shaped, or in the form of a lemon. In the length of the chains, as in the size of the individual cocci, there is usually great diversity, In some cases they are composed of only a few, three or four cocci; in others eight, ten, or twenty. Here and there an exquisite rosary will extend in a straight line across the field of the microscope, or be twisted, curved, or serpentine; in some preparations twisted or entangled strands are observed which are -composed of several hundred elements. Such chains will be found to be much thicker in one part than another. Another char- acteristic appearance is produced by separation of the elements resulting from fission in the long direction of the chain, by which lateral twigs or branches are formed. Another character, which is very striking, may be seen when the individuals in a chain have become separated; an unstained or faintly stained membrane may be found bridging across the interval. This will become still more visible in preparations contrast-stained with eosin. In plate-cultivations the appearances of the colonies are not very striking. They appear to the naked eye after three or four days as extremely minute, greyish-white, translucent dots, which under the microscope have a slightly yellowish-brown colour. They are finely granular and well defined. They do uot liquefy the gelatine, and after several weeks may not exceed the size of a pin’s head. If the surface of nutrient gelatine solidified obliquely be traced over once or- twice with a platinum needle bent at the extremity into a little hook charged with the cocci, a ribbon-shaped film develops in two or three days. This film is composed of minute, 180 INFECTIVE DISEASES. greyish-white, translucent dots or droplets, which can be more easily recognised with the aid of a pocket lens (Fig. 87). According to the number of organisms sown on the jelly, the dots or colonies may be completely isolated, or form a more or less continuous film. The film by reflected light has an iridescent appearance like mother-of-pearl, but has a bluish or bluish-grey tint by transmitted light, and with a pocket lens appears distinctly brownish. The gelatine is not liquefied, and even after several weeks the cultivation is limited to the inoculated area, and the individual colonies are, as a rule, not larger than pins’ heads. In gelatine-cultivations of the same age, but kept in the incubator at 18° C., the colonies get irregular in form, especially at the margin of the film, and give the growth an arborescent, fringed, or serrated appearance. Cultivated on the oblique surface of nutrient agar-agar at 37° C. the growth is very similar, forming a film composed of minute white colonies like grains of sand; but the film appears less transparent, is ‘whiter, and the colonies have a greater tendency to get irregular in form. If inoculated with one tracing of the needle the growth is scanty, but tends to get thicker in the centre than towards the margins, which may have a terraced appearance. Inoculated in the depth of gelatine, there appears after a day or two at 18°C. a thread-like growth along the track of the inoculating needle. This delicate growth is found on examination with a pocket lens to consist of a linear series of extremely minute granules. In a few days’ more, the beads or granules become more marked, but even after weeks, the cultivation only appears like a string of minute, white, compact, globular masses or grains. In broth at 37° C. the cocci in twenty-four hours create a turbidity, and gradually develop beauti- ful chains varying in length according to the age of the cultivations. Even in forty-eight hours there may be chains of eight, ten, twenty, or a hundred elements. After a few days the growth settles down at the bottom of the tube in the form of a white deposit, while the supernatant liquid becomes again clear. Inoculated subcutaneously in the ear of rabbits, they produce in two days an inflammatory thickening with erysipelatous redness, or sometimes suppuration. They may occur in vaccine lymph, as the result of con- tamination, and Pfeiffer suggested that before calf lymph is employed for vaccination it should be tested on a rabbit’s ear. If in two days no rash has been produced, the possibility of the presence in the lymph of Streptococeus pyogenes or erysipelatis is excluded. SUPPURATION, PY/EMIA, SEPTICEMIA, ERYSIPELAS. 181 According to Fliigge and others, after subcutaneous inoculation of mice with a small quantity of a cultivation, there is no result in 80 per cent. of the animals experimented upon. Sometimes there is limited pus formation at the seat of inoculation, sometimes the animals die without any very striking pathological appearances. They occur in abscesses, pyeemia, and septicemia, and are often found in diseases such as scarlet fever and typhoid, associated with septic complications. They have been isolated from air, soil, and water. The streptococcus found in erysipelas agrees in description, and is merely a variety of Streptococcus pyogenes. It has been definitely established by the researches of Frankel and Freudenberg, and later by those of the author, Raskin, Prudden, and Bayard Holmes, that Streptococcus pyogenes is frequently found in scarlet fever and diphtheria, and in other diseases associated with septic complica- tions. The author has isolated Streptococcus pyogenes from acute abscesses, from suppuration after surgical operations, from pyzmia, from pyemia after scarlet fever, and from purulent peritonitis. Some of these cultures have been kept up for very long periods, extending over some years, so that opportunities occurred for a complete investigation into the life history of this micro-organism. Variations in the appearances of cultures have been observed when obtained from the same source. A number of cultures from pus were prepared on gelatine and agar, made according to the usual formula, but at different dates, and, therefore, varying slightly in composition and quality. Sub-cultures were also started in nutrient gelatine of precisely the same composition, but from primary cul- tures of the same micro-organism in different media—agar-agar, milk, and broth. The descriptions of the streptococcus hitherto published were then found to be inadequate. The different cultures and sub-cultures presented striking variations in the microscopical and macroscopical appearances. Some sub-cultures on gelatine, for exam- ple, exhibited a finely dotted appearance, others showed every variety in the size, and degree of opacity of the colonies (Fig. 89). Cultures in broth also, varied in appearance, owing to slight variation in the composition of the medium, to slight differences of temperature, and other conditions difficult to determine. The addition of glycerine to broth materially alters the appearance of the culture. It was con- clusively proved that minute differences arise from different conditions of the cultivating media. The author was led to study exhaustively the streptococcus of acute suppuration in bovines. Primary cultures of Streptococcus pyogenes from man, and primary cultures from 182 INFECTIVE DISEASES. a case of purulent peritonitis in a cow, were carried through sub-cultures under exactly similar conditions.. -Cultivations of the Streptococcus pyogenes bovis exhibited variations in microscopical and cultural characters which were even more marked than in the case of the Streptococcus pyogenes hominis. By selecting certain cultures from both sources there was a striking similarity if not identity between them, but, when compared under exactly identical conditions, there was more difference in cultural characters between the Streptococcus pyogenes bovis and the Streptococcus pyogenes hominis than between the Streptococcus pyogenes hominis and the Streptococcus erysipelatis, and they may therefore be regarded as distinct varieties (Figs. 89, 90). Some of the diseases and -conditions in which Streptococcus pyogenes has been found may be alluded to more in detail. Spreading Gangrene —From a case of spreading gangrene, which was identical with Ogston’s erysipelatoid wound gangrene, and regarded by him as the most intense and dangerous form of erysipelas, Rosenbach obtained pure-cultivations of a streptococcus by incising the skin of the limb, and inoculating tubes from the turbid reddish fluid which escaped. That the streptococcus was identical with Streptococcus pyogenes was ascertained by comparison with a cultivation derived from pus, of the mode of growth, and of the effect on animals. Surgical Fever.—Eiselsberg proved the presence of a streptococcus in the blood of several cases of surgical fever in Billroth’s clinic. The organism was identified by cultivation with Streptococcus pyogenes. Diphtheria.—In three cases of typical diphtheria, Loffler found a streptococcus. He isolated it by cultivation, found that it was similar in form, characters on cultivation, and effects after inoculation, to Fehleisen’s streptococcus of erysipelas. Liffler was not inclined to regard them as identical, because Fehleisen never found his cocci in the blood-vessels. Fliigge named the organism Streptococcus articulorum, and states, that after subcutaneous inoculation or injection of a cultiva- tion in mice, a large proportion of the animals die, and in the sections of the spleen and other organs the streptococci are again seen. Baum- garten investigated the same subject, and decided that the streptococcus was identical with Streptococcus pyogenes. Small-pox.—Hlava has established the presence of Streptococcus pyogenes in the pustules of variola, and Garré found streptococci in the internal organs in a case of variola hemorrhagica. In a fatal case of variola complicated with pemphigus, Garré found a streptococcus in the pemphigus vesicles. Whether it was identical with Streptococcus erysipelatis Garré left an open question. Yellow Fever,—Babes observed the presence of streptococci in the vessels of the kidney and liver in yellow fever. Cultivation experiments are wanting. It was probably a case of secondary infection with Strepto- coccus pyogenes. SUPPURATION, PYAMIA, SEPTICEMIA, ERYSIPELAS. 183 Bilious Fever.—Babes, in a case of fidvre bilieuse typhoide, found masses of streptococci filling the vessels of the liver, kidney, and spleen, This was probably another instance of secondary infection with Strepto- coccus pyogenes. Measles.—From the blood and inflammatory post-products in measles, Babis isolated a streptococcus, which he describes as closely resembling the Streptococcus pyogenes. Ulcerative Endocarditis —Wyssokowitsch found cocci in the internal organs in ulcerative endocarditis, and produced the’ disease in animals, after injury to the valves, by injection of Streptococcus pyogenes and other organisms. Weichselbaum, by microscopical research and by cultivation experiments, proved the presence of Streptococeus: pyogenes in acute verrucous endocarditis. Baumgarten confirmed this. He found ———— ir Poe eee pai a Si Fic. 86.—ULcErative ENDOocARDITIS : SECTION OF CaRDIAc Muscig, « 700 (Kocu). Streptococcus pyogenes alone in one case and accompanied by Staphylo- coccus aureus in another. Broncho-pneumonia.—Thaon found a streptococcus in the lungs of children in fatal cases of broncho-pneumonia, complicating measles, diphtheria, and whooping cough. It was regarded as identical with the streptococcus isolated by Léffler from diphtheria. Frankel discovered a streptococcus in the lungs of a case of true croup complicated with broncho-pneumonia, and by cultivation established its identity witb Streptococcus pyogenes. Anthrax.—Charrin found cocci in rabbits, examined some hours after death from anthrax. These, when isolated, produced death in rabbits from septicemia, without suppuration. Chains composed of from fifteen to twenty elements were found in all the organs. This was probably another instance of Streptococcus pyogenes. Syphilis.—Kassowitz and Hochsinger found the presence of a strepto- 184 INFECTIVE DISEASES. coccus in the tissues and internal organs, and especially in the blood- vessels, in fatal cases of congenital syphilis. These observers regarded their discovery as having an important bearing on the etiology of syphilis, but Kolisko pointed out that it was only the result of septic infection with presence of Streptococcus pyogenes, as had already been established in scarlet fever. Cerebro-spinal MeningitisFrom the meningeal exudation of a case of apparently idiopathic cerebro-meningitis, Banti found Streptococcus pyogenes and Staphylococcus aureus and albus. The cocci probably entered through an abscess of the jejunum. Fic. 87.—Purt-CuLTuRES Or STREPTOCOCCUS PYOGENES. a, On the surface of nutrient gelatine ; b, in the depth of nutrient gelatine ; c, on the surface of nutrient agar. Blepharadenitis and Dacryocystis.—Widmark isolated by cultivations Streptococcus pyogenes and other organisms from cases of blepharadenitis and phlegmonous dacryocystis. In phlegmonous dacryocystis Widmark found Streptococcus pyogenes almost exclusively. Leukemia.—Fliigge cultivated a streptococcus from necrotic patches in the spleen of a fatal case of leukeemia. Cultures corresponded very closely with Streptococcus pyogenes. Inoculation in the ears of rabbits produced similar results to Streptococcus pyogenes or erysipelatis. Fliigge calls 1t Streptococcus pyogenes malignus, but concludes that it is probably dentical with the streptococcus from pus. SUPPURATION, PYAMIA, SEPTIC/EMIA, ERYSIPELAS. 185 ErysIPELas. Erysipelas is an acute inflammation of the skin, occurring in connection with wounds, when it is traumatic, and on surfaces apparently sound, when it is idiopathic, as in erysipelas of the face. It is highly contagious in surgical wards, and it gives rise to rapidly fatal puerperal fever in lying-in hospitals. In such cases the virus is obviously conveyed from sick to healthy persons by direct contact, or by instruments and sponges, or by the hand of the surgeon, physician, or nurse, and possibly by the air. Fic. 88.—SEcrion oF SKIN IN ERYSIPELAS. v,v, two lymphatic vessels containing leucocytes and m,m, streptococci ; t, connective tissue ; a, connective tissue and wandering cells. x 600 (Cornit and Ranvier). Streptococcus of Erysipelas.—In 1882, Fehleisen isolated a streptococcus in erysipelas, described the appearances on cultivation, and maintained that it could be distinguished from the streptococcus of suppuration. Rosenbach agreed that the two micro-organisms could be distinguished by parallel experiments, and named the one Streptococcus pyogenes and the other Streptococcus erysipelatis. (Fehleisen). Rosenbach asserted that the colonies of the latter were more opaque and whiter than those of Streptococcus pyogenes and the growth more marked in the depth of nutrient gelatine, while microscopically the chains were better marked and larger, and the individual cocci larger than in Streptococcus pyogenes. Others who investigated this subject could not distinguisli them with certainty, either by their morphological or cultural characters or effects on inoculation. Passet found that inoculation of Strepto- coccus pyogenes induced a condition very similar to that produced by inoculation of Streptococcus erysipelatis. Hoffa and Hajek described minute differences, but Biondi and EHiselsberg failed to confirm these. 186 INFECTIVE DISEASES. Baumgarten failed to prove any essential difference. Mitchell Prudden found that Streptococcus pyogenes injected into the sub- cutaneous tissue of the ears of rabbits, produced in one no effect ; in four, slight transient redness ; in five, local redness followed by abscess; in twelve, well-marked erysipelatous redness, followed by complete resolution in seven, abscess in three, and death in two, Passet, Biondi, Eiselsberg, Baumgarten, and Mitchell Prudden concluded that, in their morphological, biological, and pathogenic characters, so far as animals are concerned, the two organisms are practically identical. The author investigated the morphology and cultural characters of the Streptococcus erysipelatis, which he had isolated from a typical case. This result cleared up the conflicting statements which had been made by different observers. By carrying out absolutely parallel experiments, the, Streptococcus pyogenes and Streptococcus erysipelatis were unquestionably distinguishable, as Fehleisen and Rosenbach had asserted. In both cases, however, inoculation of a trace of a culture from a solid medium produced only transient redness. Injection hypodermically of a broth-culture produced in both cases a spreading erysipelatous redness, followed by suppuration. It was found that primary cultures of the two micro-organisms, cultivated under precisely the same conditions, differed in the size and character of their chains, in the size of the individual elements, in the greater opacity of the colonies of Strepto- coccus erysipelatis, in a greater tendency to confluence, and in a more rapid growth. The author found that the difference was most marked in broth-cultures. Abundant flocculi were formed by Streptococcus pyogenes ; a powdery deposit with special tendency to form a granular adhesive film at the bottom of the culture flask, in the case of the streptococcus of erysipelas. Lastly, they differed in their power of resisting germicides. Fehleisen inoculated patients in hospital suffering with malignant growths, and produced a typical erysipelas with sub-cultures after an incubation of from sixteen to twenty hours. The disease was marked by rigors, fever, and general distirbance. Patients who had recently suffered from erysipelas had an immunity. Emmerich succeeded in proving the presence of streptococci in the air of a hospital where erysipelas had broken out. These cocci in their form, their characters on cultivation, and their inoculation results, were identified with the Streptococcus erysipelatis. It is not therefore exclusively parasitic. Streptococci identical or agreeing very closely in their description SUPPURATION, PYAMIA, SEPTICAMIA, ERYSIPELAS. 187 with Streptococcus pyogenes, have been found in cattle plague, foot and mouth disease, strangles, contagious mammitis in cows, and progressive tissue necrosis in mice, and they will be referred to fully in subsequent chapters. EXAMINATION AND CULTIVATION OF STREPTOCOCCI. Cover-glass preparations can be stained with the watery solutions of the aniline dyes. In some cases very beautiful preparations can be obtained by using Neelsen’s solution, and removing excess of —_ CG. b. c. Fic. 89.—Srreprococeus Procenes Hominis. Pure-cultures on nutrient gelatine. a, Sub-culture from agar. b, Sub-culture from broth. c, Sub-culture from milk. d, Sub-culture from milk. stain by rinsing in alcohol. To examine pus, milk, or broth, take an ordinary platinum needle bent at the extremity into a hooklet. Dip it into the liquid to be examined, and spread it on a cover- glass into as thin a film as possible; the preparation is treated in the ordinary way, that is to say, the film is allowed to dry, and the cover is taken up with forceps, and passed three times through the flame with its prepared side uppermost. Gram’s Method with Eosin.—In this way the streptococci are stained blue, and stand out in marked contrast to the rest of the preparation. Use freshly prepared solution. Float the cover-glasses 188 INFECTIVE DISEASES. on the solution for ten minutes to half an hour, then trarsfer them to iodine-potassic-iodide solution, until they assume the colour of a tea leaf; then immerse them in alcohol until they are decolorised ; dip them in an alcoholic solution of eosin for a few moments, and then transfer them to clove oil to clarity the film; to remove the clove oil gently press the cover between two layers of clean filter paper, then mount in xylol balsam. A good method for cultivating streptococci is to employ a steril- ised looped platinum wire, and to spread a droplet, for example, of pus or blood, over the surface of nutrient agar-agar solidified obliquely. a, Cc. Fic. 90.—Srreprococcus Pyocenes Bovis. Pure-cultures on nutrient gelatine. a, Sub-culture from agar, b, Sub-culture from broth. ¢, Sub-culture from milk. d, Sub-culture from milk. The tubes are then placed in the incubator at 37° C.; the strepto- cocci will appear in the course of two or three days in the form of minute dotted colonies. If present alone, and in considerable quantities, the inoculated surface will exhibit a pure cultivation consisting of a number of such colonies, whilst a flocculent mass is observed in the liquid which collects at the bottom of agar-agar tubes; this flocculent mass will be found to be composed of chains. From such a tube inoculate a number of the small flasks employed in Pasteur’s laboratory for cultivations in liquids. In this way a number of pure-cultivations in milk and broth are established, which can be readily examined from time to time. From a pure- SUPPURATION, PYMIA, SEPTICEMIA, ERYSIPELAS. 189 cultivation in broth or agar-agar tubes of nutrient gelatine can be inoculated. Cover-glass-preparations from the growths on solid media can be made in the usual way, and stained with either a watery solution of fuchsine or gentian violet: but to stain prepa- rations made from milk or broth, or from the liquid in agar-agar tubes, use the method of Gram; the stain will then be removed, except from the streptococci, and very beautiful preparations result. GoNORRHGA. Gonorrhea is the result of a catarrhal inflammation of the mucous membrane of the urethra, vagina, or conjunctiva caused by a characteristic pyogenic organism discovered by Neisser in 1879. Gonococcus of Neisser.—Cocci, usually in pairs 1:6 p in length, ‘8 » in width, and tetrads, with those surfaces of the com- ponent elements which are in contact, flattened. The elements are more or less kidney-shaped, and are separated by a clear unstained interval. They are found free in the pus and also in the interior of the pus cells. They stain with the aniline dyes, but are decolorised by Gram’s solution. They do not grow on the ordinary media, such as gelatine, agar, and potato, in marked contrast to the common pyogenic cocci; but Bumm succeeded in obtaining a cultivation by using human blood serum, which was procured for the purpose from the placenta. They give rise to a very delicate growth in the form of an almost invisible film, with a moist appearance, which attains its full development in a few days. Steinschneider used human blood serum and agar incubated at 35° C. Krall recommended either agar with grape-sugar and blood serum, or the same mixture with the addition of 5 per cent. glycerine. Others have employed nutrient agar with the surface moistened with sterilised human blood. More recently Keifer has been successful with a medium which is prepared in the following way: ascitic fluid is filtered and sterilised by Tyndall’s process, to this is added an equal quantity of the following mixture, agar 3-5, peptone 5, glycerine 2, salt -5 (per cent.). The ascitic agar is solidified in a Petri’s dish, and the culture incubated at 36° C. They have also been cultivated in albumin from plovers’ eggs, and in the fluid obtained from a case of synovitis of the knee joint. Inoculation of rabbits, dogs, horses, and monkeys, has been invariably unsuccessful, but sub-cultures produce the disease in the healthy urethra. 190 INFECTIVE DISEASES. The cocci are found in pus from the urethra and other mucous membranes affected by the disease. They have also been found in urethral and inguinal abscesses in association with Staphylococcus pyogenes aureus. Meruop oF STAINING. ( Cover-glass preparations are made in the usual way, and double stained with Liffler’s methylene blue, and eosin. Schiitz recommends floating the cdver-glasses for five or ten minutes in a saturated solution of methylene blue in 5 per cent. solution of carbolic acid. They are washed in water, rinsed in very weak acetic acid, and again washed in water. Safranin may be used as a contrast stain. Fic. 91.—Gonococcus x 800 (Bum). a, free cocci; b, cocci in pus cells ; c, epithelial cell containing cocci. Eeyprian OPHTHALMIA. a There are two forms of ophthalmia in Egypt, one associated with Gonococcus and the other with a bacillus closely resembling the bacillus of mouse-septicemia, but there are minute differences. Bacillus of Ophthalmia (Koch and Kartulis). Minute rods which do not grow on gelatine but readily on blood serum and nutrient agar, forming a plainly visible, whitish-grey shining growth. Animals are insusceptible, but cultures produced the disease in the human conjunctiva in two out of six cases. CHAPTER XIV. ANTHRAX. ANTHRAX is a very fatal malady, and most irregular in its be- haviour. At one time it attacks only one or two animals, and at another time it will destroy nearly all the stock on a farm. Farmers formerly regarded:the disease as non-communicable, and possibly the result of excessive or improper feeding, or faulty sani- tation, or of climatic conditions over which no control could be exercised. It is obvious that so long as the disease was regarded as the result of unknown conditions, no explanation could be given of its recurrence from time to time, or of certain animals contracting the disease and others not, and no measures of any use could be suggested to cope with an outbreak. Anthrax has always been more prevalent on the Continent than in England, and this to some extent accounts for the fact that it has received greater attention abroad. In France, Germany, Hungary, Russia, and in India and Persia, anthrax at times produces wide- spread losses. In Siberia it is still known on this account as the Siberian Plague. On the Continent there are certain localities known as anthrax districts on -account of their reputation for anthrax—for example, in the Upper Bavarian Alps in Germany and in Auvergne in France. In 1849, Pollender happened to examine the blood of a cow after death from anthrax, and discovered peculiar rod-like bodies among the blood cells. The same observation was made independ- ently by Brauell and Davaine about the same time, but the greatest importance must be attached to the publication of Davaine’s further researches in 1863. Many ridiculed the discovery of bacilli, and stoutly maintained that they were only blood crystals or accidental structures of no importance. For many years very little progress was made, and the statements of other observers who were able to verify and add to Pollender’s and Davaine’s discoveries, were still received with scepticism. 191 192 INFECTIVE DISEASES. Within the last few years a great change of opinion has taken place. Bacteriologists have investigated the whole subject, so that at the present day we kuow exactly the cause of anthrax. Bacillus anthracis (Bactéridie du charbon, Bacillus of splenic fever, Wool-sorters’ disease, or malignant pustule).—Rods 5 to 20 p long and 1 to 1:25 » broad, and threads; spore-formation present. As a thorough knowledge of the life-history of this bacillus is of the greatest importance, the various steps to be followed in a practical study of it will be successively treated in detail. Its morphological Fic. 92.—Bacittus ANTHRACIS, x 1200. Blood corpuscles and bacilli unstained ; from an inoculated mouse (FRANKEL and PFEIFFER). and biological characteristics have been very completely worked out, and it serves as an excellent subject for gaining an acquaintance -with most of the methods employed in studying micro-organisms. A mouse inoculated with the bacillus or its spores will die im from twenty-four to forty-eight hours, or more rarely in from forty-eight to about sixty hours. Examination after Death.—The spleen is found to be considerably enlarged, and may be removed, and examined by making cover-glass preparations, imoculations in nutrient media, and subsequently sections. Cover-glass Preparations —In cover-glass preparations of the blood of the spleen the bacilli are found in enormous numbers. Preparations should also be made with blood from the heart and with the exudation from the lungs and other organs; it will be DESCRIPTION OF PLATE V. Bacillus Anthracis. Fig. 1.—From a cover-glass preparation of blood from the spleen of a guinea- pig inoculated with blood from a sow. x 1200. Powell and Lealand’s apochromatic 7; Hom.imm. KE. P. 10. Fig. 2.--From a section of a kidney of a mouse. Under a low power the preparation has exactly the appearance of an injected specimen. Under higher amplification the bacilli are seen to have threaded their-way along the capillaries between the tubules, and to have:collected in masses in the glomeruli. Stained with Gram’s method (gentian-violet), and eosin. x 500. Fig. 3.—Bacillus anthracis and Micrococcus tetragenus. From a section from the lungs of a mouse which had been inoculated with anthrax three days after inoculation with Micrococcus tetragenus, A double or mixed infection resulted. Anthrax-bacilli occurred in vast numbers, completely filling the small vessels and capillaries, and in addition there were great numbers of tetrads. Stained by Gram’s method (gentian-violet), and with eosin. x 500. Plate V. =~ 4 SRY! We 4 4 ‘7/ /, N AN Sar a ‘ a I) — ME wa \U \ Ss, = (A ~N Fig On Fig a. BACILLUS ANTHRACIS ANTHRAX. 193 noted that in these the bacilli are present in very small numbers, or altogether absent. The bacilli should be examined both unstained and stained. The rods are straight or sometimes curved ; rigid and motionless, They can be stained with a watery solution of any of the aniline dyes, and are then seen to be composed of segments with their extremities truncated at right angles; between the segments a clear linear space exists, which gives them a characteristic appear- ance (Plate V., Fig. 1). By double staining, with Gram’s method and eosin, the rods are seen to consist of a membrane or hyaline sheath with protoplasmic contents. Drop-cultures.—A little of the blood from the spleen or heart may be employed to inoculate sterilised broth or blood serum. Several of these cultures should be prepared, and some of them placed in the incubator, and examined at intervals of a few hours. It will be observed that the rods grow into long homogeneous fila- ments, which are twisted up in strands, and partly untwisted in long and graceful curves. ‘The filaments begin to swell, become faintly granular, and bright, oval spores develop (Plate 1). The cultures in the incubator develop rapidly. A temperature of 30° to 37° C. is the most favourable for spore-formation. The spores are eventually set free, and by making a fresh cultivation, or by injecting them into a mouse or guinea-pig, they germinate again into the characteristic bacilli, which in their turn grow into filaments and spores. When the spore germinates it swells, the envelope becomes jelly- like, and gives way at one or other pole, and the contents escape and grow into a rod. Test-tube Cultivations in Nutrient Gelatine.— Typically characteristic appearances are’ obtained by inoculating a 5 to 8 per cent. nutrient gelatine. A whitish line develops in the track of the inocu- lating needle, and from it fine filaments spread out in the surrounding medium (Fig. 93). The fila~ wre. 93,—Purn Cut- ments are more easily observed with a magnifying TIVATION or Ba- CILLUS ANTHRACIS s _ : IN NUTRIENT GE- appears-only as a thick white thread. As lique- arin, faction of the gelatine progresses, these appearances gradually alter, and the growth subsides to the bottom of the tube as a white flocculent mass. In exhausted culture-media, and sometimes in the blood, filaments are seen in a state of degeneration. 13 glass. Inamoresolid nutrient gelatine the growth 194 INFECTIVE DISEASES. This has also been observed in sections of the internal organs of a rabbit which had been inoculated with the anthrax bacillus and had. died of septicemia the following morning. Test-tube Cultivations in Nutrient Agar-agar.—Cultivated upon a Fic. 94.—Cotonigs or BACILLUS ANTHRACIS, x 80 (FLUGGE). a, after 24 hours; b, after 48 hours. sloping surface of nutrient agar-agar a viscous snow-white layer is developed, but without access of air no cultivation can be obtained, the bacilli being aerobic. This can be demonstrated by completely embedding a piece of lung or spleen pulp containing bacilli, in nutrient agar-agar (p. 22). Potato - cultivations. — In about thirty-six to forty-eight hours a creamy- white or very faintly yellowish layer forms over the inoculated surface, usually with a translucent edge, and sometimes a strong, penetrating odour of sour milk. Plate-cultivations.—From the spleen Fic. 95,.—IMPRESSION-PREPARA- oy blood of the heart cultivations may TION OF A COLONY, x 70. be made in nutrient gelatine on plates. The colonies develop in about two days, according to the temperature of the room. They appear to the naked eye as little white spots ANTHRAX, 195 or specks, which, on examination with a low power of the microscope and small diaphragm, exhibit two distinct forms. One form, on careful focussing, has the appearance of a little compact ball of Fic. 96.—MarGIn or A Cotony, x 250 twisted threads; in the other, liquefaction of the gelatine has commenced, and the threads spread out like locks or plaits of hair in the neighbouring gelatine. characteristic (Figs. 94, 96). These appearances are perfectly Cover-glass Impressions.—The plate-cultivations should be also examined as soon as the colonies appear, by making cover-glass im- pressions (Fig. 95). The filaments, examined with a high power, will be seen to consist of a number of rods or segments which are perfectly regular in form. On the other hand, filaments from a tube-cultiva- tion in a solid medium will often be found to be composed, not only of rods, but here and there of the so- called involution-forms (Fig. 97). From cultures in gelatine and Fic. 97.—FILAMENTS WITH OVAL AND IRREGULAR ELEMENTS, x 800. glycerine agar, very striking preparations are sometimes obtained, with numerous large spherical and lemon-shaped elements. In! a 196 INFECTIVE DISEASES. cover-glass preparation from a potato-culture the individual segments will be found to have a great tendency to be isolated one from the other, and there is copious spore-formation. Preservation of Spores.—Spores may be preserved simply by allow- ing anthrax blood to dry and then sealing it in a tube. The spores from a potato-cultivation are treated as follows :—The inoculated surface bearing the creamy cultivation is sliced off in a thin layer, and is mashed up with distilled water in a glass capsule. Sterilised silk-thread is cut up into lengths of about a quarter of an inch, and allowed to soak in the paste for some hours, under a bell-glass. The threads are then picked out with a pair of forceps, and laid upon a sterilised glass plate, covered with a bell-glass, and allowed to dry. From the plate, when’ perfectly dry, they are transferred to a small test-tube, which can be plugged with cotton-wool, or sealed in the Bunsen burner. Examination of the Tissues——The organs should be hardened in absolute alcohol, and sections prepared and stained by the ordinary methods. The method of Gram -is the most instructive, and eosin a very satisfactory contrast stain. The capillaries in the lungs, liver, kidney, spleen, skin, mucous membrane, etc., will be found to contain bacilli. In some cases the bacilli are so numerous that a section under a low power has the appearance of an injected specimen. Inoculation of Animals——A. thread containing spores, a drop of blood from an infected animal, or a minute portion of a cultivation, introduced under the skin of a mouse or guinea-pig, causes a fatal result, as a rule, in from twenty-four to forty-eight hours. Sheep fed upon potatoes which have been the medium for cultivating the bacillus, die in a few days. Goats, hedgehogs, sparrows, cows, horses, swine, and dogs are all susceptible. Rats are infected with diffi- culty. Frogs and fish have been rendered susceptible by raising the temperature of the water in which they lived. Cats, white rats, and Algerian sheep have an immunity from the disease. Attenuation of the Virus.— Toussaint attenuated cultures by exposing them for ten minutes to 55° C. Pasteur obtained a similar result by resorting to lower degrees of temperature; and Koch, Gaffky, and Loffler concluded from their experiments, that from 42° to 43° C. the bacillus was most easily deprived of its poisonous properties. By cultivating. the bacillus in neutralised broth at 42° to 43° C. for about twenty days, the infecting power is weakened, and animals inoculated with it (premier vaccin) are protected against the disease. To obtain a still more perfect immunity, they are ANTHRAX. 197 inoculated a second time with material (deuxiéme vaccin) which has been less weakened. The animals are then protected against the most virulent anthrax, but only for a time. From. a weakened culture, according to Klein, new cultures of virulent bacilli can be started, and a culture that can be used as a vaccine for sheep kills a guinea-pig, and then yields bacilli that are fatal to sheep. The virulence of the bacillus is also altered by passing the bacillus through different species of animals. The bacillus of sheep or cattle is fatal when re-inoculated into sheep or cattle; but if inoculated in mice, the bacilli then obtained lose their virulence for sheep or cattle, only a transitory illness results, and the animals are protected for a time against virulent anthrax. Exposure to a temperature of 55° C., or treatment with ‘5 to 1 per cent. carbolic acid, deprives the bacilli of their virulence. Chauveau obtained a similar result by cultivating the bacillus at 38° or 39° C. under a pressure of eight atmospheres. The possibility of mitigating the virus depends upon the species of animal; rodents cannot be rendered immune by any known anthrax vaccine. The nature of the toxic products has been described in a previous chapter (p. 42). Meruops oF Srarinine THE BacttLus ANTHRACIS. Cover-glass preparations of blood, etc., can be stained with a watery solution of any of the aniline dyes, or with Neelsen’s solution and subsequent treatment with alcohol (p. 87). The preparations may be dried and mounted permanently in Canada balsam, but the typical appearances are best observed in freshly stained specimens examined in water. .The sheath and protoplasmic contents can be demonstrated in cover-glass preparations from the e ® ~~ blood or spleen which have been . o © v stained with eosin after the method _ 7 —Z of Gram. Spores must be stained by the . ; special methods already described. A The most satisfactory preparations are obtained by double-staining with Fic. 98.—Spores or BAcrLius Ziehl-Neelsen solution and methy- ANTHRACIS STAINED WITH . GENTIAN VIOLET, x 1500. ‘lene blue (Fig. 7). Tissue sections are best stained by the method of Gram, and after-stuined with eosin, picrocarminate of ammonia, or picro-lithium- -carmine. 198 INFECTIVE DISEASES. Origin AND Mope oF SprREAD. As every outbreak of anthrax is the result of the introduction into the system of the bacilli, the question naturally arises, how are they introduced on the farm? Where do they come from? and what are the channels of infection ? The spores of the bacilli may get into the soil, and may remain there in a dormant state for many years. The spores were believed by Pasteur to be taken up by earth-worms, carried to the surface and deposited in their castings. Animals grazing are thus liable to be infected; but Koch’s experiments tended to disprove this theory. Anthrax has been known to break out among cattle grazing on a field where several years previously some Russian hides from infected animals had been buried. By some means or other the spores may contaminate the grass, and hay imported from an anthrax district may start the disease on a farm on which it had never been known to occur. The spores may in a similar way be introduced with blood manure and bone manure, and with refuse used as manure. The skin, hair, wool, hoofs, and horns of infected animals, if soiled with blood, are contaminated by the bacillus. Another way in which the disease can be communicated may be illustrated by the transmission of the disease to man. Those who handle carcasses, wool or hides of infected animals are liable to contract the disease. Slight scratches, cuts, bites, and pimples, may readily be inoculated with the bacilli or their spores. Veterinary surgeons, butchers, herdsmen, cattle drovers—in fact, all those whose occupation leads them to cut open or skin cattle, sheep, or horses, or to handle hides and wool—are liable to fall victims to this disease. In one case which was brought to the author’s notice, a veteri- nary surgeon had been called to see a bullock which had died suddenly in a meadow. A post-mortem examination was made, and the veterinary surgeon wiped his hands, which were soiled with blood, on some rough grass, and then washed them in a stream. The sedgy grass made some small cuts on his fingers, and the result was that he was simultaneously inoculated with the blood of the bullock. Local anthrax followed, two of his fingers were amputated, and he fortunately recovered. In another case a butcher dressed the carcass of a beast which had died suddenly, and while doing so scratched a pimple on his neck. An anthrax pustule developed, and after a very serious illness he also recovered; but in many cases the attack is fatal. ‘‘ Wool-sorters’ disease” is ANTHRAX. 199 anthrax of the lungs. Bales of foreign wool contain not only wool from living sheep, but wool which has been clipped from skins of dead sheep. If any of the sheep died from anthrax the wool is sure to be contaminated with blood containing the bacilli, and then wool-sorters engaged in picking the wool readily inoculate them- selves through a scratch or pimple, or by inhaling the spores. In many cases Wool-sorters’ disease is fatal. A farm may become extensively infected by the living animal. Blood containing the bacilli may be discharged from the mouth and nostrils, or be passed with the contents of the intestinal canal and bladder. The droppings contaminate the pasture or byre, and spore formation, especially in warm weather, quickly takes place. From this cause the disease may not only be conveyed to healthy cattle grazing with infected animals, but fresh cases may occur, year after year, on the same farm, and if hay is cut and sold off the farm, other cattle at a distance are similarly infected. If the flooring of cattle sheds is once soiled by infected animals it is easy to account for those otherwise mysterious outbreaks which occur when the cattle are taken in for the winter. Another source of danger arises when blood from a diseased animal is washed into brooks or streams, for thus the disease may be carried to farms in which it was previously unknown. PREVENTIVE MEASURES. Early recognition and prompt action are essential to prevent the spread of any communicable disease. Unfortunately in the case of anthrax only too often the very first indication of the existence of the disease is the sudden death in the pasture or byre of an apparently healthy beast, or possibly of one or more sheep. Nevertheless, the importance of being able to recognise any early indications is very great, because an im- mediate and careful examination should at once be made of the stock on the farm, and suspicious cases isolated from the rest. The stock-man may notice that one or two animals tend to keep away from the others. They look dull and cease feeding, and possibly shivering may be observed. In horses swelling of the throat may occur, and in some places there is discharge of blood from the orifices. Death follows the appearance of these symptoms in a few hours, and often with startling suddenness, Cattle die rapidly, but sheep, though rapidly contracting the disease, do not as a rule die so suddenly. 200 INFECTIVE DISEASES. The characteristic sign after death is enlargement of the spleen to three or four times its natural size. It is not only enlarged, but extremely soft and dark in colour. Blood spots are visible on the internal organs generally, and the intestine often contains a quantity of blood. The examination of a drop of blood will show under the microscope the characteristic bacilli. It is, however, quite unnecessary to make an elaborate post-mortem examination in order to satisfy oneself whether the disease is really anthrax or not. If an animal has died suddenly and has created a suspicion of anthrax, all that it is necessary to do is to cut cff an ear—or a foot in the case of a sheep——and make a cover-glass preparation at the first opportunity. : A farmer with a case of anthrax must be made to realise the fact that an enormous quantity of poisonous material has to be dealt with. In fact, an infected animal is more dangerous when dead than alive. The owner or person in charge must immediately notify to a police constable the existence, or even a suspicion of the existence, of the disease. Prompt measures must be taken to destroy the carcass and all traces of the blood, and thus to reduce to a minimum the chance of the disease spreading to the rest of the stock, and of creating fresh outbreaks in the future. Every possible precaution must be taken to prevent the blood of the dead animal from contaminating the pasture, byre, or water supply. The rest of the stock should be removed from the pasture or cowshed where the disease has broken out. It is desirable to give a complete change of food and water, and the whole of the stock should be examined every day for a week, and any animals showing a rise of temperature should at once be isolated from the rest. Preventive inoculation has been recommended to protect the rest of the stock, but there is not sufficient evidence of the safety of the process to lead to the adoption of this treatment. ‘Animals ready for the butcher may be removed from the risk of infection by immediate slaughter. To disinfect the pasture the best plan is a heavy top-dressing of lime, and after six weeks stock may be readmitted, though not without some risk. If year after year cases of anthrax occur on a particular pasture, the most obvious precaution is to keep stock from it altogether and convert it into arable land. As roots grown on anthrax- infected soil have been known to convey the disease, the wisest course if we have to deal with a small field or comparatively small tract of land is to throw it out of cultivation or to plant it with trees. : ANTHRAX, 201 Disposat oF THE CARCASS. The surest method to render harmless all the bacilli which exist in the carcass is burning, but cremation offers practical difficulties, especially if several carcasses have to be destroyed. In the case of an animal dying in a town, the local conditions may render it best to adopt destruction by burning or by means of chemicals. In such a case the carcass should be covered with quicklime, and then taken, in charge of an officer of the Local Authority, to a horse-slaughterer’s or knacker’s-yard, and destroyed by exposure to a high temperature, or by chemical agents especially in the vicinity of chemical works. Under the usual circumstances of death occurring on a farm, fortunately the simple plan of burtal, with the addition of lime or other chemical agents, is perfectly efficacious, and even without the use of chemicals éf the carcass has been left unopened, as the bacilli die rapidly if air is excluded. Some experiments carried out by M‘Fadyean clearly indicate the importance of leaving the carcass unopened. On July 16th a sheep was infected with anthrax by feeding it with a virulent culture. Five days later it died, and a microscopic examina- tion of blood from the ear, immediately after death, showed very many anthrax bacilli. The carcass was left unskinned and unopened until July 27th, when the various organs were cut out of the chest and abdomen and placed in a tin box. The box was then buried at a depth of about two feet in garden earth, and left there undisturbed until February 15th, when it was exhumed. The organs had become con- verted into adipocere, and this was thoroughly mixed up with water and administered to a sheep. The sheep remained perfectly healthy. In another experiment a rabbit was inoculated with anthrax on June Ist. It died on June 3rd, and blood from the ear contained the bacilli. The rabbit was left unopened for three days, and then placed in a flower pot and buried in garden earth at a depth of two feet. It was exhumed on February 15th. The tissues were all destroyed by putrefaction, and the earth in contact with the bones was administered to a sheep without conveying the disease or producing any ill effects. Thus, in the first experiment, the lungs and the intestines, in ‘which spore formation was most likely to occur, were used as a test, and in the second experiment the entire carcass. In both cases ‘there was destruction or disappearance of the bacilli, and these tests, therefore, confirm in a very marked way the opinion that prompt burial of the unopened carcass is a perfectly safe plan to adopt. 202 INFECTIVE DISEASES. If an animal has died in a meadow, a pit six feet deep should be dug close to the carcass, and if quicklime can be procured with- out delay the carcass should be buried with a layer about a foot in depth beneath it and with about the same quantity to cover it, and the pit filled up with the excavated soil. ; If there are any traces of blood where the animal lay, the contaminated ground should be covered with quicklime or drenched with strong carbolic acid, and the whole of the site of burial fenced off for six months. If an animal dies near a brook or stream then the carcass must be removed for burial to a sufficient distance to prevent any reasonable probability of contamination of the water. If death has occurred in the byre, the carcass must be removed to the nearest and most convenient spot for burial, any fodder or litter which may have been in contact with the deceased animal must be destroyed, and the shed and cart and any utensils, hurdles, etc., disinfected. ‘For the latter purpose thorough scouring with water and then washing with limewash is recommended. The limewash should be prepared immediately before use, and four ounces of chloride of lime, or half a pint of commercial carbolic acid, be added to each gallon of limewash. The following is an illustration of the value of preventive measures based upon a knowledge of the exact nature of the disease. A farm on the banks of the Yeo was repeatedly attacked by anthrax. One morning two sheep died, and other cases followed. The farmer learnt that his predecessor had buried cattle which had died of anthrax'on the very spot where the sheep were folded. He removed his flock, and had no further losses among the sheep, but he continued to lose cattle grazing in the pastures by the river. These pastures were occasionally flooded by the Yeo. Another farmer in the same locality heavily manured a field, and shortly afterwards anthrax broke out in a most deadly form on his farm. What was the cause of these mysterious outbreaks? The explanation was forthcoming, and prevention an easy maiter. The river Yeo received the washings from the wool factories at Yeovil, and the pastures were contaminated by anthrax spores in the deposit which was left behind when the flood subsided. In the second instance, it was found that the manure used for dressing the pasture consisted of a quantity of refuse from the wool factories. Infected wool from foreign countries is one of the principal sources of the disease in this country, and the remedy is to insist upon the factories destroying their refuse instead of its being allowed to contaminate the rivers or to be sold as manure. ANTHRAX. 203 So long as this source of the disease was unknown anthrax continued to be spread through the agency of the wool factories. Anthrax spores may also be introduced with foreign oats, hay, and manure, so that it is almost impossible absolutely to prevent the importation of the disease; but the danger of its unlimited extension and disastrous losses can be minimised, and the com- munication of the disease to man and to swine entirely avoided by simple precautions. ANTHRAX IN SWINE. The occurrence of anthrax in swine is a subject upon which there has long been considerable diversity of opinion. Some of the Fic. 99.—ANTHRAX IN Swine. From a photograph taken during life, showing a swollen condition of the neck and throat six days after ingestion of part of the viscera of a bullock which had died from anthrax. earliest writers on the diseases of animals speak of outbreaks of anthrax among swine, but whether any or all of these outbreaks were examples of true anthrax has long been a matter of un- certainty; for it is well known that diseases quite distinct were included under the name anthraz. Menschel states that in an outbreak in which twenty-four persons were attacked with malignant pustule, many of them from eating the flesh of beasts suffering from anthrax, pigs which were fed on the same flesh also became affected, and a woman who ate some of the diseased pork was subsequently ill. Roche-Lubin, while apparently accepting the occurrence of anthrax in swine, taught that the pig resisted inoculation with the blood of a different species. 204 INFECTIVE DISEASES. In this country accounts have been published from time to time of a fatal disease in pigs induced by eating the flesh of animals which had died of what was described as ‘“‘ blood-poisoning.” Some very striking cases occurred in the practice of Mr. Wilson, of Berkhampstead, and were reported in the Veterinarian. A farmer consulted Mr. Wilson respecting an illness with which his pigs were affected, stating that two or three were dead and many others seriously ill. They were strong hogs, ranging from six to nine months old. On inquiry it was ascertained that the farmer had lost a beast suddenly about a week previously, that the carcass had been opened in the yard, and the viscera thrown to the pigs. Mr. Wilson expressed the belief that the disease was anthrax, and stated that he found the pigs exhibiting many of the symptoms observable in cattle, with the additional one of enlargement round the throat from infiltration of a yellow fluid causing discoloration of the skin. Also, in the reports of the Agricultural Department of the Privy Council thirteen pigs were reported as suffering from anthrax in 1886, and one hundred and fifty-nine in 1887. But the question arose whether the disease in the pigs was genuine anthrax or septic poisoning. Williams says: “The flesh of animals which have died or have been killed whilst suffering from the disease [anthrax] should not be used as food either for men, pigs, or dogs, as it is apt to cause death by blood poisoning”; and Steel writes: “‘ Pigs, dogs, and poultry should not be allowed to feed on blood, flesh, and ejecta of anthrax victims,” but no statement is made as to the nature of the illness produced. No doubt these writers have been greatly influenced by the opinion of many bacteriologists, for Toussaint maintained that pigs could not be infected with anthrax, and a similar view was at one time upheld in this country by Klein, who stated that pigs were very insusceptible. In Germany also, pigs have been credited with an immunity from this disease. In the face of these conflicting statements the author carried out a series of experiments in order to ascertain the nature of the disease in swine resulting from the ingestion of the offal of animals which had died of anthrax; and the result of inoculation with blood of animals which had died of anthrax, and with pure cultivations of the Bacillus anthracis. As a result of these experiments genuine anthrax was produced in swine (a) by feeding them with anthrax offal; (0) by injection of blood of a bullock which had died of anthrax; (c) by passing ANTHRAX. 205 bacilli through the guinea-pig, and transmitting them to swine by injection of blood from the spleen ; (d) by injecting a pure cultiva- tion of the anthrax bacillus; (e) and lastly, the anthrax bacillus was isolated from swine in which the disease was accidentally induced on a farm, and the disease reproduced by inoculation of guinea-pigs and mice with blood from the spleen. The Author's Conclusions.—Swine of all ages can be affected with anthrax. If the disease is induced by ingestion of anthrax offal, the tonsils are ulcerated, and constitute the point of access of the bacilli to the blood. In such cases the characteristic symptom is Fic. 100.—ANTHRAX IN Swine. From a photograph taken post-mortem. Death occurred four days after the ingestion of offal from a bullock which had died of anthrax, and there was well-marked cedema of the throat, cheeks, and eyelids. enormous swelling around the throat. If the disease is induced by hypodermic injection, the same cedematous infiltration of the tissues occurs at the place selected for inoculation. Death may occur in twenty-four hours, or not until after five or six days. There is a rapid rise of temperature, usually a rash-like discoloration of the skin, sometimes loss of power over the limbs, and general weakness and disinclination to move; the animal may lie helplessly on its belly, and utter plaintive cries when disturbed. At the post- mortem the most characteristic feature is the gelatinous cdema which, in the case of ingestion of offal, is found around the throat. There is usually congestion of all the organs and engorgement of 206 INFECTIVE DISEASES. the heart and large vessels, fluid in the cavities of the chest and abdomen, and enlargement and hemorrhage into the lymphatic glands. There is in some cases inflammation of the intestines with submucous and subserous hemorrhages. The spleen may be normal in size, pale and flabby, and the liver only slightly congested and friable; in other cases the condition is characteristic, the spleen is the seat of hemorrhage, causing more or less local enlargement, which is superficially of a deep purple colour; the liver may also be greatly congested, very friable, and marked with purple patches. The examination of the bloodof the heart and spleen for anthrax bacilli must be carried out with great perseverance and discrimi- nation, as they are present only in small numbers, and in some cases have given place entirely to septic organisms. Inoculation with the blood will produce either typical anthrax, or malignant cedema or some other form of septicemia. Possibly in the cases arising from ingestion of offal the ulcerated condition of the throat affords a nidus and a means of access for septic organisms. It is also well known that blood in a state of putrefaction may contain the bacillus of malignant cedema. In the presence of putrefactive organisms the anthrax bacillus rapidly disappears. If, therefore, inoculation of guinea-pigs or mice is used as a test for ascertaining the nature of an outbreak in swine, it must not be concluded, if Pasteur’s or some other form of septicemia result, that the disease was not anthrax, while, on the other hand, the discovery of the anthrax bacillus in the blood of the pig, or the production of anthrax in guinea-pigs or mice, is positive evidence as to the nature of the original disease. Peuch, in France, had obtained similar results by injecting pigs with anthrax blood and anthrax cultures. He also .carried out some interesting experiments bearing on public health. The leg of a pig which had died of anthrax was covered with pounded sea-salt. Previously to the curing, a slice of the flesh was squeezed in a meat- press, and the liquid thus obtained was employed for inoculation. The animals inoculated died of typical anthrax. In six weeks the curing was considered to be completed, and a slice was cut from the ham and soaked in filtered water. The juice was extracted in the meat-press, and employed for the inoculation of four guinea-pigs and three rabbits. Slight swelling and a certain amount of redness at the seat of inoculation were the only results. A few drops of the muscle-juice were added to sterilised broth, and produced a mixed cultivation of micrococci and motile bacilli. A rabbit and two guinea-pigs inoculated with the cultivation remained quite healthy. ANTHRAX. 207 These experiments demonstrated that salting destroys the viru- lence of the flesh of pigs which have died of anthrax, but in order to obtain this result the salting must be thoroughly carried out. If the process be incomplete the flesh is still virulent. Thus the leg of a pig salted for only fourteen days furnished a juice which possessed a certain amount of virulence. Out of three inoculated rabbits, one died in ninety-seven hours of anthrax, and the others recovered. ‘Three guinea-pigs all succumbed, and a fourth guinea- pig inoculated with a cultivation from the muscle-juice also died. Peuch considers that there is danger in consuming flesh which has not been thoroughly cured. As it has been clearly shown that pigs may become infected with anthrax, these animals come under the Anthrax Order of 1886. This provides for the disposal of the carcass; and although Peuch has shown that salting destroys the virulence of the flesh of pigs which have died of anthrax, there can be no doubt that it is quite right that such animals should be condemned as unfit for food. Further, the recognition of the occurrence of true anthrax in swine is an additional reason for condemning the Continental practice of eating hams, sausages, etc., in the raw state. Indeed, the viru- lence of anthrax flesh suggests one possible explanation of some of those obscure cases of meat poisoning which have occurred in this country. It is possible that the flesh of animals which had died of anthrax was used in the preparation of sausages, pork-pies, etc, and that the cooking was not sufficient to deprive the meat of its poisonous properties. Equine ANTHRAX. Veterinary authorities have described “ Anthrax in the Horse,” but it remains to be seen whether there are not two or more affec- tions included under this heading. Fleming says: “The most acute form of anthrax, the apoplectic, is somewhat rare in the horse, and has perhaps been most frequently observed on the Continent. Though cases are recorded, but through an error in diagnosis, under other names in the veterinary literature of this country, I have only witnessed two cases in England ; though during the intense summer heat in the north of China I had several.” The question to which the author is in a position to give a definite answer is, whether the disease produced by the Bacillus anthracis ever occurs in the horse. Whether that has been pre- viously determined, at any rate in this country, it is difficult to say. 208 INFECTIVE DISEASES. Fleming in describing the pathological anatomy of anthrax in the horse, says: “The spleen is double and treble its ordinary volume ; its surface is sometimes bosselated by tumours; its texture is softened and transformed into a viscid reddish-brown or violet mass, and the mesenteric glands are infiltrated. The blood in it has been found to contain bacteridia when examined soon after death.” Williams, who says that “anthrax in the horse rarely occurs in this country,” adds, that it is prevalent in India, and is there termed ‘“Loodiana disease,” and in Africa ‘ Horse-sick- ness.” But “ Horse-sickness,” from recent researches, is certainly not anthrax. Williams described a case which occurred in 1879 as one of anthrax. A carriage-horse died suddenly while in harness ; “a large black tumour was found in the lungs, and the pulmonary arteries were engorged with black tarry blood, which, when micro- scopically examined, was found to contain the bacilli in a most perfect form, and very numerous indeed.” In 1884, an outbreak of charbonous fever occurred in Liverpool. Williams proceeded to investigate the outbreak, and found two horses dead on his arrival, one having died only a few hours previously. The bacilli from the blood in this case are figured, and the following statement made : ‘‘ These bacilli seem to differ from those of splenic fever, being rather smaller in diameter, and so far as my observations go, multiply by fission only, not developing spores.” On the other hand, the author investigated the blood of a mare which was supposed to have died of anthrax, and on examining cover-glass preparations of the blood, it was found to contain large numbers of bacilli with the characteristic microscopical appearances of anthrax bacilli. To place the question beyond any possible doubt a number of tubes of agar-agar were inoculated. These, after three days in the incubator, produced typical cultivations, and on examina- tion by the ordinary methods and by double-staining, yielded very beautiful preparations of filaments and spores. At the same time that the cultivations were prepared, two mice were inoculated at the root of the tail with a trace of the blood. Two days afterwards they were both found dead, and with the characteristic post-mortem appearances, spleen much enlarged, and anthrax bacilli in enormous numbers. There can be no doubt that true anthrax occurs in the horse ; and the author, in 1887, recommended that it should be scheduled under the Contagious Diseases (Animals) Act, and equine anthrax has been included in the Anthrax Order of 1895. More recently Pemberthy has described cases of equine anthrax ANTHRAX. 209 which he believes to have been the result of infection from feeding on foreign oats or imported hay. Preventive Inoculation.—The prevention of anthrax by means of protective inoculation or vaccination has been attempted on a very large scale in France, and it is claimed that the results have been very beneficial to agriculture in that country :— Animals Mortality. Total {No.of} Vacci- |. Pirie ———— Total |A verage No. of | Veteri-) nated Joss | _ loss Year. Animals | nary after After | After | pnuyin Total. | per | before Vacci- Re- | Receipt 1st 2nd | Fest oe cent. | Vacci- nated. | ports. of Vacci- | Vacci- Year nation. Reports, | nation, | nation, . 1882 | 270,040 112 | 243,199 756 847 | 1,037 2,640 | 1:08 | 10% 1888 | 268,505 103 | 193,119 436 272 784 1,492 | 0°77 1884 | 316,553 109 | 231,693 770 444 | 1,083 2,247 | 0:97 1885 | 342,040 144 | 280,107 884 735 990 2,609 | 0°93 1886 | 313,288 88 | 202,064 652 303 514 1,469 | 0°72 1887 | 293,572} 107 | 187,811} 718 737 968 2,493 | 1-29 Shee bi 1888 269,574 50 101,834 149 ~ 181 300 630 | 0°62 1889 | 239,974 48 88,483 238 285 501 1,024 | 1°16 1890 | 223,611 69 69,865 331 261 244 836 | 1°20 1891 | 218,629 65 53,640 181 102 17 360 | 0-67 1892 | 259,696 70 63,125 319 183 126 628 | 0-99 18938 | 281,333 30 73,939 234 56 224 514 | 0°69 Total 3,296,815 990 | 1,788,677 | 5,668 | 4,406 | 6,798 | 16,872 | 0-94 : (0°32%) | (0°24%) | (0°38%) 1882 35,654 127 22,916 22 12 48 $2 | 0°35 5% ia 26,453 130 20,501 17 1 46 64 | 0°31 1884 33,900 139 22,616 20 13 52 85 | 0°37 1885 34,000 192 21,078 32 8 67 107 | 0°50 1886 39,154 185 22,113 18 7 39 64 | 0°29 Oxen 1887 48,484 148 28,083 23 18 68 109 | 0°29 or 1888 34,464 61 10,920 8 4 35 47 | 0°43 Cows 1889 82,251 68 11,610 14 7 31 52 | 0°45 1890 33,965 7 11,057 5 4 14 23 | 0-21 1891 40,736 68 10,476 6 4 4 14 | 0-18 1892 41,609 71 9,757 8 3 15 26 | 0:26 \ 1893 38,154 45 9,840 4 1 13 18 | 0°18 438,824 | 1,255 | 200,962 177 82 432 691 | 0°34 (0-09% )| (0°04% )| (021%) 210 INFECTIVE DISEASES. The vaccine is supplied, by a company in Paris, in two strengths. Reports are supplied by veterinary surgeons, and the results have been tabulated by Chamberland and published, and commented upon by Cope in a report to the Board of Agriculture (1894), The column of deaths, in the above table, includes the animals which died from the vaccination, and those which died from natural infection. It is claimed that the percentage of losses has been reduced from 10 per cent. to ‘94 per cent. in sheep, and from 5 per cent. to ‘34 per cent. in cattle. Cope, in the report just referred to, regards these conclusions as somewhat fallacious, because in order to prove that the animals inoculated received immunity, it should be shown that they were subsequently exposed to the risks of natural infection. This was not the case. But a report obtained from the Bureau in Paris gives the actual number of animals on each of the infected farms, and the number which have died of the disease ; and when compared with Chamberland’s statistics it is evident that nine-tenths were not on farms where the disease appeared—at least, during 1889-92—and that the deaths from anthrax on those farms where it was reported to exist were, if anything, higher than they were supposed to be prior to the introduction of the system of vaccination ; and in spite of the immense number of animals vaccinated the official returns obtained from Paris, by Cope, indicate that the mortality from anthrax, calculated in the ordinary way, remains as high as ever. Anthrax in France. No. of = , : Year. Owthreas PPE N o pesmi No. Di ae a oe of 1889 618 22,599 1,458 6°5 1890 536 24,073 1,123 47 1891 570 21,356 1,444 6:8 1892 607 28,199 1,581 56 CATTLE, 1889 | — 6,059 700 116 1890 _— 5,365 V1 14:4 1891 — 7,299 849 11-6 1892 | _ 5,058 804 159 SHEEP 1889 : — i 16,540 755 46 1390 | -— | 18,708 352 19 1891 — i 14,057 545 4:2 1892 a ! 23,141 T17 34 ANTHRAX. 211 In Germany, veterinary and agricultural authorities agree that the results have not met with the success which has been claimed for vaccination in France. Experiments were undertaken for the German Government, and in one set of experiments twenty-five sheep were vaccinated with the first vaccine without an accident, but three died five days after the second vaccine. In another experiment two hundred and fifty-one sheep were vaccinated with only one death, and subsequent inoculation with virulent anthrax proved that they had immunity. Six head of cattle were vaccinated without any loss, and six more were used for a control experiment. Inoculation with virulent virus proved fatal to the control animals, but the vaccinated were pro- tected. These, with other animals similarly vaccinated, amounting in all to two hundred and sixty-six sheep and eighty-three head of cattle, were then turned out to graze on infected pastures with two hundred and sixteen unvaccinated sheep as a control experiment. Within five months four of the vaccinated and eight of the un- vaccinated sheep died of anthrax, and one of the vaccinated and one of the unvaccinated cattle. The result of these experiments led to the following conclusions :— (1) That the first vaccine is mild and harmless. (2) That. the second vaccine, even in the hands of experts, is dangerous and often fatal. (3) That sheep are more affected than cattle by the injections, exhibiting fever and other indications of illness. (4) That cattle and sheep which recover from the vaccination have an immunity against anthrax when tested by experimental inoculation. (5) That vaccinated cattle and sheep tested by exposure to natural infection by grazing on infected pastures contract the disease in the ordinary way. (6) That the time for which immunity is conferred has not been determined. In England, Klein tested the vaccine, with the result that animals either succumbed to the vaccine, or to virulent anthrax after recovery from the vaccine. Protective inoculation has also been employed in a few instances by leading agriculturists, but with very unsatis- factory results. _ Stamping-out System.—In Germany the conclusion is that the safest measures are destruction of carcasses and disinfection, and that inoculation will have no effect in lessening the loss caused by this disease. 212 INFECTIVE DISEASES, In England the stamping-out system has been advocated for many years, and is still regarded as the only reliable means for suppressing the disease ; and the possible introduction of the disease among healthy stock by vaccination, and especially in localities in which anthrax is unknown, would be contrary to the principles upon which the system is based. These principles are illustrated by the following extracts from the Anthrax Order of 1895 :— NoviFICATION. 2.—(1) Every person having or having had in his possession or under his charge, an animal affected with or suspected of anthrax, shall, with all practicable speed, give notice of the fact of the animal being so affected or suspected, to a constable of the police force for the police area wherein the animal so affected or suspected is or was. (2) The constable shall forthwith give information of the receipt by him of the notice to an Inspector of the Local Authority, who shall forth- with report the same to the Local Authority. (3) The Inspector of the Local Authority shall forthwith give information of the receipt by him of the notice to the Medical Officer of Health of the Sanitary District in which the affected or suspected animal is or was. Duty of Inspector to act immediately. 3. An Inspector of a Local Authority on receiving in any manner whatsoever information of the supposed existence of anthrax, or having reasonable ground to suspect the existence of anthrax, shall proceed with all practicable speed 1o the place where such disease, according to the information received by him, exists, or is suspected to exist, and shall there and elsewhere put in force and discharge the powers and duties conferred and imposed on him as Inspector, by or under the Act of 1894 and this Order. Public Warning as to Existence of Disease. 4.—(1) The Local Authority may, if they think fit, give public warning by placards, advertisement, or otherwise, of the existence of anthrax in any shed, stable, building, field, or other place, with or without any particular description thereof, as they think fit, and may continue to do so during the existence of the disease, and, in case of a shed, stable, building, or other like place, until the same has been cleansed and dis- infected in accordance with this Order. (2) It shall not be lawful for any person (without authority or excuse) to remove or deface any such placard. Wilk of Diseased or Suspected Cow not to be Removed, 5. Where anthrax exists or has existed in any shed, stable, building, or other place, it shall not be lawful to remove from such shed, stable, ANTHRAX. 213 building, or other place the milk of any cow which is affected with or suspected of anthrax. Removal of Dung or other Things. 6. It shall not bei lawful for any person to send or carry, or cause to be sent or carried, on a railway, canal, river, or inland navigation, or in a coasting vessel, or on a highway or thoroughfare, any dung, fodder, or litter that has been in any place in contact with or used about a diseased or suspected animal, except with a Licence of the Local Authority for the District in which such place is situate, on a certificate of an Inspector of the Local Authority certifying that the thing moved has been, so far as practicable, disinfected. Disposal of Carcasses, 7.—-(1) The carcass of an animal which at the time of its death was affected with or suspected of anthrax shall be disposed of by the Local Authority as follows :— (i.) Either the Local Authority shall cause the carcass to be buried as soon as possible in its skin in some convenient or suitable place removed from any dwelling house and at such a distance from any well or watercourse as will preclude any risk of the contamination of the water therein, and at a depth of not less than six feet below the surface of the earth, having a layer of lime not less than one foot deep beneath, and a similar layer of lime above, the carcass ; (ii.) Or the Local Authority may, if authorised by Licence of the Board, cause the carcass to be destroyed, under the inspection of the Local Authority, in the mode following: The carcass shall be disinfected, and shall then be taken, in charge of aun officer of the Local Authority, to a horse-slaughterer’s or knacker’s-yard approved for the purpose by the Board, or other place so approved, and shall be there destroyed by exposure to a high temperature, or by chemical agents. (2) With the view to the execution of the foregoing provisions of this Article the Local Authority may make such Regulations as they think fit for prohibiting or regulating the removal of carcasses, or for securing the burial or destruction of the same. (3) Before a carcass is removed for burial or destruction under this Article it shall be covered with quicklime. In no case shall the skin of the carcass be cut, nor shall anything be done to cause the effusion of blood. (4) A Local Authority may cause or allow a carcass to be taken into the District of another Local Authority to be buried or destroyed, with the previous consent of that Local Authority, but not otherwise. Digging Up. 8. It shall not be lawful for any person, except with the Licence of the Board or permission in writing of an Inspector of the Board, to dig 214 INFECTIVE DISEASES. up.-or cause to be dug up, the carcass of any animal that has been buried. Disinfection in Case of Anthrax. 9.—(1) The Local Authority shall at their own expense cause to be cleansed and disinfected in the mode provided by this Article— (a) All‘ those parts of any shed, stable, building, or other place in which a diseased or suspected animal has been kept or has died or been slaughtered ; (b) Every utensil, pen, hurdle, or other thing used for or about any diseased or suspected animal ; (c) Every van, cart, or other vehicle used for carrying any diseased or suspected animal on land otherwise than on a railway. (2) The mode of the cleansing and disinfection of such shed, stable, building, or other place, or the part thereof, shall be as follows :— (i.) All those parts aforesaid of the shed, stable, building, or other place shall be swept out, and all litter, dung, or other thing that has been in contact with, or used about, any diseased or suspected animal shall be effectually removed therefrom ; then (ii.) The floor and all other parts of the shed, stable, building, or other place with which the diseased or suspected animal or its droppings or any discharge from the mouth or nostrils of the animal has come in contact, shall be, so far as practicable, thoroughly washed or scrubbed or scoured with water ; then (iii.) The same parts of the shed, stable, building, or other place shall be washed over with limewash made of freshly burnt lime and water, and containing in each gallon of limewash four ounces of chloride of lime or half a pint of commercial carbolic acid, the limewash being prepared immediately before use ; : (iv.) Except that where any place as aforesaid is not capable of being so cleansed and disinfected, it shall be sufficient if such place be cleansed and disinfected so far as practicable. (3) The mode of the cleansing and disinfection of such utensil, pen, hurdle, or other thing, and such van, cart, or other vehicle aforesaid, shall be as follows :— (i.) Each utensil, pen, hurdle, or other thing, van, cart, or other vehicle, shall be thoroughly scraped, and all litter, dung, sawdust, or other thing shall be effectually removed therefrom ; then (ii.) It shall be thoroughly washed or scrubbed or scoured with water ; then (iii.) It shall be washed over with limewash made of freshly burnt lime and water, and containing in each gallon of limewash four ounces of chloride of lime or half a pint of commercial carbolic acid, the limewash being prepared immediately before use. : (4) All litter, dung, or other thing that has been removed from any such shed, stable, building, place, van, cart, or vehicle as aforesaid, shall be forthwith burnt or otherwise destroyed or disinfected to the satisfac- tion of an Inspector of the Local Authority. ANTHRAX. 215 (5) The Local Authority may make such Regulations as they think fit for the purpose of carrying out the provisions of this Article. Occupiers to give Facilities for Cleansing. 10.—(1) Where the power of causing any place, thing, or vehic'e to be cleansed and disinfected under this Order is exercised by a Local Authority, the owner and occupier and person in charge of the place, thing, or vehicle shall give all reasonable facilities for that purpose. (2) Any person failing to comply with the provisions of this Article shall be deemed guilty of an offence against the Act of 1894, Regulations of Local Authority as to Movement of Animadls, Fodder, etc, 11. A Local Authority may make such Regulations as they think fit for the following purposes, or any of them :— (a) For prohibiting or regulating the movement of any diseased or suspected animal into or out of any shed, stable, building, field, or other place, or any part thereof ; (b) For prohibiting or regulating the movement of any animal into or out of any shed, stable, building, field, or other place, or any part thereof, in which there is or has been any diseased or suspected animal ; and ‘(c) For regulating the removal out of any shed, stable, building, field, or other place of any fodder, litter, or other thing that has been in contact with or used for or about any diseased or suspected animal ; : but nothing in any such Regulation shall authorise movement in contravention of any provision of any Order of the Board for the time being in force ; and a Regulation under paragraph (0) of this Article shall operate so long only as any animal which in the judgment of the Local Authority is diseased or suspected remains in the shed, stable, building, field, or other place to which the Regulation refers, and, in case of a shed, stable, building, or other like place, until the same has been cleansed and disinfected in accordance with this Order. Slaughter in Anthrax and Compensation. 12.-(1) A Local Authority may if they think fit cause to be slaughtered— (a) Any animal affected with anthrax or suspected of being so affected ; and (6) Any animal being or having been in the same field, shed, or other place, or in the same herd or flock or otherwise in contact with animals affected with anthrax, or being or having been in the opinion of the Local Authority in any way exposed to the infection of anthrax. (2) The slaughter of animals under this Articlé shall be conducted in such mode as will so far as possible prevent effusion of blood. 216 INFECTIVE DISEASES. (3) The Local Authority shall out of the local rate pay compensation as follows for animals slaughtered under this Article :-— (a) Where the animal slaughtered was affected eal anthrax the compensation shall be one-half of the value of the animal _immediately before it became so affected ; and _() In every other case the compensation shall be the value of the animal immediately before it was slaughtered. ; “(4) Provided, that if the owner of thé animal gives notice in writing to the Local Authority, or their Inspector or other officer, that he objects tothe animal being slaughtered, it shall not be lawful for the Local Authority to cause that animal to be slaughtered except with the further special authority of the Board first obtained. Keeping of Swine in Slaughter-houses. 16. It shall. not be lawful'for any person, in any case in which the slaughter of any animal is authorised or required by this Order, to use for such slaughter any slaughter-house in which swine are kept. Whether an anthrax virus can be obtained which is absolutely incapable of creating centres of infection, and can therefore be recommended with safety. for vaccination as an auxiliary and voluntary measure, is a matter for further investigation. CHAPTER XV. QUARTER-EVIL.~-MALIGNANT EDEMA, —RAG-PICKERS’ SEPTICEMIA.-— SEPTICZMIA OF ODIs BIG: —SEPTICEMIA OF MICE. QUARTER-EVIL in cattle, malignant cedema, and rag-pickers’ septicemia in man, septicemia in guinea-pigs, and septicemia in mice, are all varieties of septicemia produced by bacilli. An account of quarter-evil, malignant edema, and rag-pickers’ septicemia may appropriately follow the chapter on anthrax, as they have certain similarities to that disease. They are, however, not only distinct from anthrax, but must be carefully distinguished from each other. In connection with these forms of bacillary septicemia in man and cattle we may study bacillary septicemia in small animals. QUARTER-EVIL. The disease known in this country as quarter-evil or black-leg is identical with the French Charbon symptomatique and the German Rauschbrand. Symptomatic anthrax in a very slight degree resembles anthrax. The disease occurs usually in young cattle from a few weeks to about twelve months old, and attacks sheep and horses, but not swine or poultry. It is characterised by the develop- ment of an emphysematous swelling of the subcutaneous tissue and muscles, generally over the hind quarter. Infected animals cease feeding, the temperature rises, lameness supervenes, and death occurs in about forty-eight hours. The tumour on incision is found to contain a quantity of dark sanguineous fluid, with characteristic bacilli. Bacillus of Quarter-evil (Bucille du charbon symptomatique, Rauschbrand bacillus).—Motile rods with rounded ends, 3 to 5 w in length, +5 to 6 » in breadth. Spore-formation present. The spores are oval, generally situated near the extremity of the rods, and when fully developed considerably exceed the rods in diameter. 217 218 INFECTIVE DISEASES. Tnvolution forms are freely developed in old cultures, and in cultures made in unsuitable media. The bacilli possess numerous Fic. 101. Bacturr or QuARTER-EVIL x 1000. From an agar culture (FRANKEL and PFEIFFER). liquefaction commences. In the depth of nutrient gelatine the growth occurs in two or three days at 20° to 25° C. towards the lower part of the track of the inoculating needle. ‘The gelatine slowly liquefies, and there is considerable formation of gas with the development of a peculiar odour. Spore- formation occurs freely in cultures, but not in the blood of infected animals until after death. Guinea-pigs inoculated with a pure- culture, or with spore-bearing threads, die in twenty-four to thirty-six hours. An em- physematous infiltration with sanguineous serum is produced at the seat of inoculation, and the surrounding muscles are of a dark colour. The internal organs are more or less congested. The bacilli are found in the local exudation and in the surrounding tissue, and some hours after death in flagella, and their power of movement at once distinguishesthem from anthrax bacilli. They can be cultivated in the ordinary media in the absence of oxy- gen, but more readily with the addition of grape-sugar or glyce- rine. Radiating ments grow out fila- from the more or less spher- ical colonies directly Fie. 102. Pure-CuLTURE OF BACILLI OF QUARTER-EVIL IN GRAPE-SUGAR GELA- TINE (FRANKEL PFEIFFER): and QUARTER-EVIL. 219 increasing numbers in the blood of the heart and in the internal organs. Quarter-evil and malignant edema, though possessing points of resemblance, are distinct diseases. Not only do the bacilli in the two cases differ in minute morphological and biological details, but Kitasato showed that guinea-pigs rendered immune against virulent quarter-evil had no immunity against malignant cedema. Protective Inoculation.—Arloing, Cornevin and Thomas have producel iramunity by inoculating healthy cattle with a small quantity of the fluid from the tumour of an infected animal. Recovery takes place, and subsequent inoculation with a strong dose is without effect. Similar results may be obtained by intravenous injection of a few drops of the exudation, For general application of the system of protective inoculation, the virulent liquid and affected muscles are dried at 32° to 35°C., and the dried mass triturated with water and heated to 100°C. This is used as the first vaccine. An infusion similarly prepared, but only heated to 80° C., forms the second vaccine. The dry powder is a convenient form for general distribution, and 7, of a gramme is triturated with 5 cc. of water, and 3 cc. is injected into each animal. In about ten days the second vaccine is employed, and cattle so treated are said to have a complete immunity from fatal doses. The place chosen for the injection is the under surface of the tail, a short distance from the extremity. The hair is clipped at this spot, and the point of a syringe is pushed in between the skin and the bone, and the vaccine slowly injected. Roux and Chamberland produced immunity by inoculation of filtered cultures. Cultures in broth were deprived of bacilli by heating to 115° C., or by filtration through porcelain. Guinea-pigs were inoculated with three doses of 30 cc. at intervals of two days, and subsequently injected with a solution of virulent black-leg powder and lactic acid, which killed control animals in twenty-four hours. Kitt employed cultures on agar a fortnight old, or fresh cultures sterilised by steam for thirty minutes. lt was found possible to confer immunity in oxen, sheep, and guinea-pigs against the most virulent extract. Kitt’s method has the advantage over others of only necessitating one single injection. Whether these experiments are of scientific interest rather than of practical value may be regarded as an open question. On the Continent, and especially in France, vaccination against quarter-evil has been carried out extensively ; and by comparing the 220 INFECTIVE DISEASES. mortality among the vaccinated and unvaccinated in localities where the disease commonly occurs, it has been said that the results are extremely favourable. The matter was investigated in this country by a committee | of, the Midland Veterinary Medical Association, and in the course of the experiments some surprising results were obtained. Six calves and four sheep were vaccinated, and five calves and two sheep were left unvaccinated as a control experiment. The seventeen animals were subsequently inoculated with virulent virus in the form of dried and powdered muscle. In forty-eight hours all the sheep died, and all the calves exhibited a swelling at the seat of inoculation. In another set of experiments, healthy calves inoculated with fresh juice from the tumour in a case of quarter-evil were not materially affected. The possibility of those _ealves which possess a natural immunity being classed as protected by the inoculation must be admitted, and the efficacy and safety of the process is by no means established. Matienanr CEDEMA. The disease known by surgecns as progressive gangrene, gan- grenous emphysema, or surgical gangrene, has been shown by the researches of Chauveau, Arloing, Rosenbach and Babés, to be due to a bacillus identical with the microbe septique of Pasteur and the bacillus of malignant cedema of Koch. The bacillus or its spores may be spread by the neglect of antiseptics. The disease occurs especially after compound fractures and gun-shot wounds. If a guinea-pig is subcutaneously inoculated with earth, putrid: fluid, or hay dust, death frequently occurs in from twenty-four to forty-eight hours. At the autopsy the most characteristic symptom is a widespread subcutaneous oedema accompanied by air-bubbles. This originates from the point of inoculation, and contains a clear reddish liquid full of motile and non-motile bacilli. The internal organs are little changed, the spleen is enlarged and of a dark colour, and the lungs are hyperemic, and have hemorrhagic spots. Examined immediately after death, few or no bacilli are detected in the blood of the heart, but in that of the spleen, liver, lungs, and other organs, in the peritoneal exudation, and in and upon the serous coating of the abdominal organs, they are present in large numbers. If, on the other hand, the animal is not examined until some time after death, the bacilli are found in the blood of the heart, and distributed all over the body. Bacillus Gidematis Maligni, Koch (Pasteur’s Septicemia).— MALIGNANT CEDEMA, 221 Rods from 3 to 3°5 pw long and 1 to 1:1 » wide; they mostly lie in pairs, and then appear to be double this length. ‘The rods are rounded at their ends, and form threads which are sometimes straight, but more commonly curved. In stained preparations they have a somewhat granular appearance. They are motile, possessing flagella, and form spores. The bacilli are distinguished from anthrax bacilli by their being somewhat thinner, by their rounded ends, and by their motility. Moreover, anthrax bacilli never appear as threads in fresh blood, and are differently distributed throughout the body, They are anaerobic, and can be cultivated on blood serum and on neutral solution of Liebig’s meat extract in an atmosphere of carbonic acid. By embedding material containing bacilli in nutrient agar-agar 7 \ NS | Fie. 103. Bacirir or Maticnant Gipema x 950. From the subcutaneous tissue of a guinea-pig. (BAUMGARTEN. ) and nutrient gelatine, characteristic cultivations are obtained. The following process may be adopted to obtain a pure cultivation. gy oo to twenty hours, The spleen and lymphatic glands are found to be Fic. 107.—Bactentum OF RaBBIT enlarged, and the lungs congested, Seprice#mia ; Bioop or Spar- : row, x 700 (Koon). but there are no extravasations, and no peritonitis. Mice and birds are very susceptible; guinea-pigs and white rats have an immunity. Davatne’s SEPTICEMIA. A disease was produced by Davaine by injecting rabbits with putrid blood. Rabbits, mice, fowls, pigeons, and sparrows are sus- ceptible, and guinea-pigs and rats are insusceptible to the bacteria found in this disease. Rabbits inoculated with a trace of blood con- taining the bacteria, or with a culture, died in from twenty-four to thirty-six hours. The spleen, liver, lungs, and intestines are highly congested, and sometimes extravasations and peritonitis are found. Fown CHOLERA. Fowl cholera is an epidemic disease of the poultry-yard much dreaded in France, and well known through the researches of Perroncito, Toussaint, Pasteur, and Kitt. 2 a Fic. 109.—Bacterium or Fowt Fic. 108.—Bacterium or Fown Cuosra, CHoLEra, x 2500. Muscle juice > si : x 1200. From blood of inoculated Fowl. of Fowl. Fowls suffering from the disease usually die in from twenty-four to forty-eight hours. The disease shows itself by the fowls becoming FOWL CHOLERA. 229 somnolent, They suffer from weakness of the legs, and their wings trail. There is frequently diarrhea, with slimy greenish evacuations, and death usually ensues after a slight convulsive attack. On making a post-mortem examination the viscera will be found to be congested, and there is intense inflammation of the mucous membrane of the intestine, with hemorrhages. The blood from the heart, and the intestinal contents, contain the bacilli which were at one time believed to be peculiar to this disease. Inoculation subcutaneously, or administration with food, of a small quantity of a broth cultivation will produce death in twenty-four to thirty-six hours. Pigeons, pheasants, sparrows, Fic. 110.—Bacrerium oF Fowi CuHoiera. Section from liver of Fowl x 700 (FLUGGE). rabbits, and mice are susceptible. In guinea-pigs, sheep, and horses, an abscess develops at the seat of inoculation. Rabbits are readily infected by sprinkling a broth-cultivation on cabbage leaves or any suitable food. It was with this microbe that Pasteur proposed to eradicate the plague of rabbits in Australia. Fowl cholera has an additional interest, as it was with this disease that Pasteur first investigated the attenuation of virus. Broth-cultures which were several months old were found, when injected, to produce apparently only a local effect. This weakening of the virus was attributed by Pasteur to exposure to oxygen. After recovery the fowls were protected against the action of virulent cultures, while fowls not immunised died the following day. Kitt, by working with pure-cultures on solid media, showed that the 230 INFECTIVE DISEASES. weakening was not due to prolonged exposure to oxygen, but that old contaminated broth-cultures after a time completely lost their power, owing to the antagonism of the bacteria accidentally present. Filtered broth-cultures contain the toxic products of the bacillus, atid produce slight illness and subsequent immunity. Fow. Enteritis. Fowl enteritis is an acute infectious disease of fowls, the course and symptoms of which are regarded by Klein as distinct from fowl | cholera. The fowls suffer from diarrhea, with liquid greenish evacuations, but are never somnolent, and death occurs in one or two days. After death the-mucous membrane of the intestine is found to be congested, and coated with grey or yellowish mucus; the liver is congested, spleen enlarged, and lungs normal. There are a few bacilli in the blood of the heart, very many in the spleen and liver, and they are in the form of a pure-culture in the mucus of the intestine. Klein says that the bacilli are a little longer and thicker than those found in fowl cholera, which they only slightly resemble, and that the course of the disease, the symptoms and pathological appearances, definitely distinguish it from fowl cholera, but that nevertheless it belongs to the same family of bacilli. Pigeons are said to be insusceptible, rabbits only slightly susceptible. By feeding and by subcutaneous inoculation the disease can be communicated to healthy fowls, but there is no sign of illness until the fourth day. As regards attenuation, the bacilli behave like those from cases of fowl cholera. Duck CHouErRa. Duck cholera is an epidemic disease of ducks which was investi- gated by Cornil. The symptoms are similar to those of fowl cholera. They suffer from diarrhoea and weakness, followed by death in two or three days. The bacillus cultivated from the blood of ducks is pathogenic in ducks but not in fowls or pigeons, and large doses are required to kill rabbits. Grouse Disrasz. Grouse disease is an acute infectious disease of red grouse. According to Klein the chief pathological feature is severe pneu- monia ; there is also patchy redness of the serous and mucous linings GROUSE DISEASE. 231 of the intestine, and the liver is congested and dark, but the spleen is not enlarged. The bacilli are found in the heart, lungs, and liver, and in the extravasated blood. Cultures inoculated in mice and guinea-pigs produce pneumonia and death. ceptible, and other small birds. Fowls, pigeons, and rabbits are insusceptible. Bacillus of Hzmor- rhagic Septicemia.—Very short rods, with rounded ends, ‘6 to ‘7 w in width and 1:4 » in Sparrows are sus- length. Fic. 111.— Bacittus or Hamorrwacic Sepric#MiA. Blood of a Rabbit after death from Septicemia x 950 (BauM- GARTEN). In stained preparations the rods Fie. 112. — Bacitnus or Heorruacic SEepriceMia (Rabbit Septiczemia). Pure- culture in Gelatine after four days (BAUMGARTEN. ) been obtained by different observers. are observed to be deeply stained at the ends and to have a clear interval in the middle; they were on this account mis- taken by earlier observers for dumb-bell micrococci or diplococci. They are non- motile, and spore-formation is unknown. They grow readily in the ordinary media. The colonies in nutrient gelatine appear about the third day. They are circular in form, with a sharp dark outline, and of a yellow colour, lighter at the peri- - phery. Later, the central zone is finely granular, and of a dark yellowish-brown colour, with the lighter peripheral zone more clearly defined. In the depth of gelatine a delicate filament develops in the track of the needle, composed of minute spherical colonies, somewhat trans- parent, and yellowish-white in colour. At the point of puncture there may be no growth visible, or a flat and very limited growth. Inoculated on the surface of nutrient media a thin layer develops, with an irregular serrated and thickened On potato different results have Some maintain that a border. greyish-white or yellowish film will develop at the temperature of the blood ; but aecording to Caneva, the bacilli, whatever their source, 232 INFECTIVE DISEASES. will not grow on potato, while Bunzl-Federn maintains that the bacilli from fowl cholera and rabbit septicemia do grow upon potato, but those from septicemia in deer, buffaloes, and swine do not. Opinions differ with regard to their action on milk. The reaction for phenol and indol is given in all cases, except with cultures obtained from septicemia of buffaloes. The virulence of the bacilli may be diminished and attenuated, but it may subsequently be restored by successive inoculation in animals. The pathological lesions vary in different animals. The most common result is con- gestion of the internal organs and hemorrhage. The bacilli culti- vated from cattle or deer produce fatal results when inoculated in swine. The bacilli from any of these sources inoculated in pigeons will produce fowl cholera, but the bacilli isolated by Schiitz from swine, and those from deer, are not fatal to fowls. Further, the bacilli cultivated from swine fever are fatal to guinea-pigs, while the bacilli from rabbit septicemia have very little effect. upon them. The bacilli have been found in association with diseases of cattle, swine, deer, birds, rabbits, and mice, and have been cultivated from healthy mucous membrane. Veranus Moore found the bacilli in the mucus from the upper air passages, of 71 per cent. of cattle, 85 per cent. of cats, and 33 per cent. of dogs. From these sources inoculations were made in rabbits, and rapidly fatal septicemia was produced, associated in less acute cases with peritonitis, pleurisy, and pericarditis. CHAPTER XVII. PNEUMONIA.—INFECTIOUS PLEURO-PNEUMONIA OF CATTLE.-— INFLUENZA. Acute Croupous PNEUMONIA. Pyevumonia is an acute inflammation of the lungs with fibrinous infiltration of the air vesicles and interstitial tissue. There are varieties of pneumonia, and one form is commonly believed to be infectious, The lung passes through three stages—engorgement, red hepati- sation, and grey hepatisation. In the first stage the lung is of a deep red colour, but still vesicular; in the second stage the affected part is*more or less solid, and has the consistency of liver, owing to the fibrinous lymph which is poured out into the alveolar cavities. In the grey hepatisation, the exudation contains more leucocytes and less fibrin, and this is followed by the stage of suppurative softening and final absorption. The sputum at the commencement of the disease is rusty, from the presence of blood, and later on has the appearance of prune juice. Examination of the sputum by Gram’s method will reveal numerous micro-organisms, and two of these are deserving of special study—the pneumococcus of Friedlinder, which is present in a considerable proportion of cases, and Sternberg’s micrococcus, which was found in sputum by Talamon. -- 1n 1888, there was considerable prevalence of pneumonia in Middlesbrough, with strong tendency to occur in groups of cases; but there was admittedly room for doubt whether the clinical and post-mortem appearances were not identical with ordinary pneumonia. Dr. Ballard maintained that there were facts and considerations which appeared to show that the disease was com- municable from the sick to the healthy, and that it was a specific febrile disease, and Klein isolated and described the micrococcus present in these cases. Bacterium Pneumoniz Crouposze (Pneumococcus, Fried- 233 234 INFECTIVE DISEASES. lander).—Cocci ellipsoidal and round, singly, or in pairs (diplococci), rods and thread-forms. The cell- membrane thickens, and develops into a gelatinous capsule, which is hel round if the coccus is single, and | ellipsoidal if the cocci occur in pairs or in rod-forms. Cultivated in a YF GG a test-tube of nutrient gelatine they ! @. | grow in the form of a round- headed nail, without liquefaction of the gelatine (Fig. 114). The cocci when artificially cultivated Fic. 113.—Bacrertum PNeumonre have no capsule, but it again Crovuros#, From Preurat Caviry appears after their injection into or A Mousz, x 1500. A, B. animals, Thread-forms. C, D, E. Short rod-forms. G. Diplococci. H. Cocci. I. Streptococci. (Zopf.) can also be cultivated on blood serum and on_ boiled potatoes. They occur in pneumonic exudation. In- oculation of dogs with a cultivation of the cocci occasionally gave positive results; but in rabbits no results followed. Guinea- pigs proved to be susceptible in some cases ; but thirty-two mice, after injection of a cultivation diffused in sterilised water, into the lungs, died without exception. The lungs were red and solid, and contained the cocei, which were also present in the blood, and in enormous numbers in the pleural exudation. Inhalation experiments by spray- ing the cocci diffused in water into mouse cages produced pneumonia and pleurisy in three out of ten mice. The nail-shaped cultivation is not always produced, nor are these conclusions accepted by all investigators. The cocci Fic. 114.—FRreDLANDER’S Pyevumococcus. Pure- culture in nutrient- METHODS OF STAINING FRIEDLANDER’S gelatine four days old (BauMGaRTEN). PNEUMOCOCCUS. Cover-glass preparations of pneumonic sputum or exudation may be treated as follows :— PNEUMONIA, 235 (a) Stain by the method of Gram, and after-stain with eosin. ; ; (>) Treat with acetic acid, then stain with gentian-violet or Bismarck- brown. Examine in distilled water, or dry and preserve in Canada balsam. (c) Float them on weak solutions of the aniline dyes twenty-four hours ; differentiation between coccus and capsule is thus obtained. (d) Stain with osmic acid; the contour of the capsules is brought out. Fic. 115.—Carsvre-cocct rrom Pneumonia, x 1500 (BauMGARTEN). Sections of pneumonic lung should be stained by— (a) Method of Gram. (6) Method of Friedlander. This method is employed to demonstrate the capsules in tissue sections. It consists in placing the sections twenty- four hours in the following solution :— Fuchsine . ‘ R 1 Distilled water i F 100. Alcohol . ‘ A F A 5 ‘ i 04 2 They are then rinsed with alcohol, transferred for a couple of minutes to a 2 per cent. solution of acetic acid, and treated with alcohol and oil of cloves in the usual way, and preserved in Canada balsam: Sternberg’s micrococcus was first found in the blood of rabbits inoculated with saliva. Three months afterwards, Pasteur encoun- tered the same organism in rabbits inoculated with the blood of a child suffering from rabies. The same organism in 1883 was found by Talamon in pneumonic sputum. It was identified by Sternberg. Two years afterwards further observations were made by Frinkel, Gamaleia, and others. It has also been found in purulent meningitis by Netter, and by Monti in cerebro-spinal meningitis, by Weichsel- baum in ulcerative endocarditis, and by others in acute abscess of the middle ear, and in purulent inflammation of the joints following pneumonia. Glacial acetic acid . 236 INFECTIVE DISEASES. Sternberg’s Micrococeus. (Microbe de salive, Pasteur ; Micro- coccus Pastewri, Sternberg; Lancet-shaped micrococcus, Talamon ; Streptococcus lanceolatus Pastewri, Gamaleia ; Diplococcus pmneur monie, Weichselbaum ; Bacillus septicus sputigenus, Fliigge ; Micrococcus of sputum septicemia, Frankel.) Spherical or oval cocci, singly, in pairs or in chains, often lanceolate and capsuled. Stain readily with the aniline colours and by Gram’s method ; non-motile. They flourish in alkaline media in the incubator. In broth they produce in twelve hours a cloudiness due to the develop- Fic. 116.—Micrococctus or Sputum Srepricem1a. From the blood of a Rabbit. x 1000 (FRANKEL AND PFEIFFER). ment of cocci and short chains. After a time these subside to the bottom of the tube, and the liquid above becomes clear. In plate-cultivations the colonies are small, circular, white, and granular. In the depth of gelatine, minute white colonies develop along the track of the needle without liquefaction of the gelatine; and on the sloping surface of nutrient agar or blood serum minute trans- parent drops appear along the line of inoculation. They grow in milk, coagulating casein; but they do not grow on potato. Sub- cultures quickly lose their virulence, but regain it by inoculation. oe ad PNEUMONIA. 237 The injection of a minute quantity (-2 cc.) of a virulent culture subcutaneously proves fatal to mice and rabbits in from twenty- four to forty-eight hours. Immediately afterwards there is a rise of temperature of 2° or 3° C., later it falls, and just before death it is several degrees below normal. After death, the post-mortem appearances of septicemia are observed, in addition to diffuse inflammatory cedema extending in all directions from the point of injection. The subcutaneous connective tissue contains sanguineous serum and micrococci in abundance. The liver and spleen are some- Fic. 117.—Cotontes or STernBere’s Micrococcus. Agar plate-cultivation, after 24 hours. x 100 (FRANKEL AND PFE£IFFER). times dark and engorged, and blood from the heart and internal organs teems with micrococci. There is no indication of pneumonia after subcutaneous inocula- tion, but intra-pulmonary injections produce fibrinous pneumonia, often fatal (Talamon, Gamaleia). The result is usually fatal in rabbits and sheep, but dogs, as a ru Injection of cultures into the trachea of rabbits is (Monti). Sternberg concludes that t infectious pneumonia, but the with widely different pathologica being a saprophyte, which finds in pneumonia a suitable soil for its development, must not be overlooked. 238 INFECTIVE DISEASES. Klein’s Micrococcus.—Klein found in pneumonic sputum a diplococeus which does not appear to differ from Sternberg’s micro- coceus. In cover-glass preparations the bacilli are surrounded with a halo, but no definite capsule, as in Friedlinder’s coccus. They appear as short rods constricted in the centre, or dumb-bell forms, and forms intermediate between cocci and bacilli. In gelatine, after two or three days, greyish-white spots appear, which enlarge in the next two or three days into flat, translucent, greyish-white plaques, with irregular serrated outline. Colonies beneath the surface are spherical, and of a brownish-yellow colour. In test-tubes in the depth of the gelatine a whitish-brown filament develops on incuba- tion, composed of minute spherical colonies, and on the surface the growth spreads out into a greyish-white film with serrated margin. On the surface of obliquely solidified gelatine the growth forms a thin whitish film, which enlarges in breadth with irregular outline, reaching its maximum in about a fortnight. The growth on agar is very similar. Broth becomes uniformly turbid in twenty-four hours, then a powdery precipitate makes its appearance. On potato there is a thin, moist, faintly yellowish-brown film. Cultures examined in the fresh state show many rods in a resting stage, and others actively motile. In addition to the dumb-bell forms there are others of greater length, and in old cultures involuted and degenerated forms. Spore-formation has not been observed. A broth-eulture Mis sctuted into two rabbits producer tumour which subsided in,a week. Death ensued in one case’ in eight days, and in the other in three week8S. There was purulent matter at the seat of inoculation in one ; in the other, pericardial exudation and hyperemia of-the lungs. Broth-cultures inoculated intravenously produced no effect. In guinea-pigs there was swelling at the seat of inoculation, or slight~indication of disease and recovery. Cultures inoculated in mice produced rapid breathing, drowsiness, and death in from twenty-four to ninety-six hours. The internal organs were_con- gested, the lungs inflamed, and the blood and organs in the iroetNtel animals contained the diplococci in consfderable numbers. isolated a coccus whichghe,named the Micrococcus lanceolatus Animals either rapid septicemia Jat a later period. Inocula Immunity has been produced in rabbits by the int 101 Pof the virus in a diluted form. Blood obtained from immunised fabbits was kept at 10° C. for twelve hours, and then filtered, and animals injected with it acquired immunity against virulent cultures (Emmerich). INFECTIOUS PLEURO-PNEUMONIA. 239 Filtered cultures are said to confer immunity for six months, and raising the temperature of filtered cultures increases the strength of the substance which gives immunity (Klemperer). The blood serum of immune animals can confer immunity on other animals, and, it is said, will arrest the progress of the disease produced by injection of healthy animals with virulent cultures. The cultures contain a proteid body, for which the name pneumo-toxin has been suggested, and anti-pneumo-toxin has been isolated from immunised blood serum. Inrectious PLEURO-PNEUMONIA. Infectious pleuro-pneumonia is a highly infectious disease peculiar to cattle; it is characterised by rise of temperature and exudation into the lungs. It is often fatal, and sometimes exists in an extremely chronic form. It is believed to have been unknown in England previously to 1840, and is supposed to have been introduced from Holland, where in one year it destroyed seven thousand cattle. Fic. 118.—Acutre CatTarrHaL Pneumonia (Ox). a, Coagulated mucus with catarrhal cells (c) embedded ‘in it; b, catarrhal cells sprouting from alveolar wall, . x (480. (Hamilton. ) The disease cannot be conveyed “artificially. A living, diseased animal must be the medium of infection. The disease is apparently only communicated by cohabitation. Brown injected large quanti- ties of lymph from diseased lungs into the jugular vein, into the 240 INFECTIVE DISEASES. tissue of the lungs, and into the trachea, without any result except a small abscess at the seat of puncture. Administration of the virus by the mouth gave equally negative results. The lungs from a recently killed animal infected with pleuro-pneumonia were placed in a shed occupied by healthy heifers, and left there for several days. Fodder, litter, and manure were taken from places in which there were diseased cattle, and placed in contact with healthy cattle, and sub- sequently all the animals used in these experiments were slaughtered and carefully examined, and the results were absolutely negative. Similarly negative results followed experiments made by Sander- Fig. 119.—Inrectious PLEURO-PNEUMONIA OF CATTLE, x 480. a,a,a, Exudation in air-vesicles, composed of a network of fibrinous lymph with entangled leucocytes; b,b, the same caseating; ¢, the air-vesicle filled with leucocytes only. In the centre is a blood-vessel filled with a fibrinous plug. (Hamilton. ) son and Duguid,.and thus confirmed the conclusion arrived at by Brown, that the disease could only be communicated by actual contact of a living, diseased animal with a healthy one. The symptoms of the disease in cattle are a rise of temperature to 105° or 107°, and a peculiar dry cough, and later the usual indications of pneumonia, difficulty in breathing, and dulness on percussion. Asarule, death follows from exhaustion ; but the disease may also assume a chronic form, if the animal escapes slaughter, and the lung may become gangrenous or tubercular. The period of incubation is about thirty days, but it is uncertain. The lesions are ft pees EA Ce SAR fa BNW NLA ¢, a ) Ai i Fic. 120.—Inrecrious PLEURO-PNEUMONIA Or CaTTLE, x 50. a,a,a, Spaces in deep layer of pleura and interlobular septa filled with fibrinous lymph; }, deep layer of pleura running down to an interlobular septum ; ¢,¢, air-vesicles filled with fibrinous lymph; d, blood-vessels of alveolar walls, much congested; ¢, large congested blood-vessels; ff, interlobular septa infiltrated with fibrinous lymph;! g, blood-vessel in interlobular septum (Logwood, Eosin and Farrant’s solution).—Hamitton. 16 242 INFECTIVE DISEASES. limited almost entirely to the lungs; congestion is quickly followed by inflammation and effusion into the air vesicles and the intra- lobular fibrous tissue which is so well marked in the lungs of cattle. Leucocytes are entangled in the fibrinous lymph, and the intra- lobular septa are enormously enlarged, so that the red lobules are mapped out by the paler septa, and produce on section of the diseased parts a very striking marbled appearance. A somewhat similar appearance is sometimes observed in septic pleuro-pneumonia in calves. The effusion occurs also in the air vesicles. The stages of grey hepatisation and suppurative softening have not, as a rule, time to develop. Hemorrhagic infarctions are sometimes produced, which in turn become gangrenous or cheesy, and a capsule may form round the diseased part. Roy found micro-organisms in the lymph, but attached no importance to them. Bruylants and Verriet also described a micro-organism in the lymph. Later, Poels and Nolen isolated a micrococcus resembling Friedlinder’s pneumococcus, Inoculation in the lungs produced a condition in cattle which they considered indicative of pleuro-pneumonia. Lustig was unable to confirm these observations, but succeeded in isolating from lymph a bacillus and three species of micrococci. ‘One of the micrococci formed an orange growth when cultivated, and was regarded as the specific micro-organism, as it caused sub- cutaneous tumefaction, and, it is said, some degree of immunity. Brown cultivated a number of organisms which on inoculation only produced local irritation. Intravenous injection produced death from septicemia in one case in thirty-six hours. Arloing isolated four different organisms, including a bacillus which was named Pneumo-bacillus liquefaciens bovis. Later, he prepared a fluid from broth-cultures, pneumo-bacillin, which pro- duced a more marked rise in temperature in animals suffering from pleuro-pneumonia than in healthy animals, and its use was suggested as an aid in diagnosis. Arloing named the micro- organisms provisionally Pneumo-bacillus liquefaciens bovis, Pneumo- coceus gutta cerei, Pneumococcus lichenoides, and Pneumococcus flavescens. Pneumo-bacillus liquefaciens bovis.—Short rods, non- motile; spore-formation not observed. They rapidly liquefy gelatine, and form on potato a white layer, which becomes brownish and sometimes greenish. According to Arloing pure-cultures produce in the ox, when injected subcutaneously or in the lung, the same lesions which are produced by virulent lymph. Guinea-pigs and rabbits are slightly susceptible, dogs are immune. INFECTIOUS PLEURO-PNEUMONIA. 243 Nocard does not accept Arloing’s conclusions, and expresses the opinion that the virus is particulate, but is not due to any micro- organism. which can ,be detected or cultivated by the methods at present adopted. In the opinion of the author, who has also examined the micro-organisms in pleuro-pneumonia, it is fully justifiable to regard the nature of the contagium as ‘unknown. Preventive Inoculation.—In 1852 Willems introduced inocula- tion, The liquid from the lungs of an animal with pleuro-pneumonia, which had recently died, was inoculated in the extremity of the tail by a puncture with a lancet. Swelling occurred at the seat of inocu- jation, and on recovery the animals were believed to be protected. ‘A Dutch Commission reported that the inoculation gave a temporary protection. A Belgian Commission in the following year reported that the phenomena of inoculation could be produced several times in succession in the same animal, and that it was not a certain preventive. A: French Commission in 1854 concluded that a power of resisting infection was given, but the period was undetermined. - Protective inoculation continued to be employed, and various modi- fications of the method were introduced. Threads soaked in lymph were inoculated, or the lymph subcutaneously or intravenously injected. The usual result of the inoculation is swelling and, in about ten or fourteen days, effusion of straw-coloured fluid, which is occasion- ally blood-stained. Gangrene may follow, involving amputation of the tail. Germont and Loire in Queensland adopted the method— which was suggested by Pasteur—of inoculating calves in the loose cellular’ tissue behind the shoulder. This produces intense edema and a quantity of lymph. There has been much controversy with regard to the value of protective inoculation. ey Stamping-out System.—Brown maintains that pleuro- pneumonia can be exterminated only by slaughter of the diseased animals, and quotes the results experienced in the Netherlands in support of his views. In 1871 slaughter for pleuro-pneumonia was commenced in the Netherlands. There were 6,000 cattle attacked by the disease. In 1872 owners were compelled to slaughter not only diseased cattle, but those which had been in contact with them, unless inoculated, and the attacks were, in consequence, reduced to 4,000. In 1873 it was forbidden to move cattle out of infected districts, and the attacks were reduced to 2,479. In 1876 slaughter of the whole herd was decreed, and during the first year of this heroic system the cases fell 244 INFECTIVE DISEASES, from 2,227 in 1875, to 1,723 in 1876, to 951 in 1877, to 698 in 1878, to 157 in 1879, and to 48 in 1880. In England the Pleuro-pneumonia Act came into force on September Ist, 1890. Notification was to be given by the owner to a police constable of the district, who was required to transmit. the information to the Local Authority and also to the Board of Agriculture. An inspector, with the aid of the veterinary surgeon, arranged for the slaughter of the suspected animal, and, if the disease proved to be pleuro-pneumonia, of the rest of the herd. The results are shown in the following table :— Diseased Cattle. Cattle Number Number Number Healthy alauepter ee VExns of of of Cattle in |e Ea? "| Infected Fresh Cattle contact phan font Counties, | Outbreaks. | Attacked. : B slaughtered. Pleuro- Killed. Died. Pneumonia. 1890 36 465 2,057 2,022 37 11,301 1891 27 192 778 778 _ 9,491 232 1892 10 35 134 134 orl 3,477 188 1893 4 9 30 30 —_— 1,157 86 1894 2 2 15 15 —_— 391 41 Thus the number of cases was reduced from 2,057 in 1890 to 15 in 1894. A departmental committee appointed in 1892 to inquire into pleuro-pneumonia and tuberculosis, came to the following conclusions with regard to pleuro-pneumonia :— (1) That the system of compulsory slaughter be applied not only to. all diseased cattle, but also to all cattle which have been in association with them, or otherwise in any manner exposed to the infection of the disease. (2) Compulsory slaughter should be accompanied by supplementary measures, such as restrictions on the movement and sale of cattle within, or coming from, infected districts. (3) Any exception to, or modification of, the system of compulsory slaughter, as provided in the Slaughter Order, 1888, should only be applicable to cattle in the dairy yards, byres, and cowsheds of large towns, the owners or occupiers of which may claim in writing the privi- lege of exemption for their cattle from immediate slaughter, on the following conditions :— INFECTIOUS PLEURO-PNEUMONIA. 245 (a) No head of cattle that has been brought into such dairy premises shall be removed therefrom, except for the purpose of immediate slaughter. (b) In the event of an outbreak of pleuro-pneumonia, all the diseased cattle shall be slaughtered. (c) All the remaining cattle on such premises where an outbreak has occurred shall be branded, and regularly subjected to the ther- mometer test ; and whenever a continuous increase of temperature, ; rising above 104°, is shown, they shall be slaughtered. (d) No fresh cattle shall be admitted into such premises while any of the cattle thus branded remain alive. (4) Inoculation cannot be recommended as a means of eradicating pleuro-pneumonia, nor as practicable under existing conditions. Although it is open to owners to inoculate their cattle, it should be distinctly understood that that operation shall not give them any immunity from the regulations above suggested. The order at present in force is the Pleuro-Pneumonia Order of 1895. In addition to regulations for the movement of cattle, for disposal of carcasses, for markets, and for compensation for slaughter, the Order contains the following provisions :— NotiFIcaTIon. Notice of Disease. (1) Every person having or having had in his possession or under his charge a head of cattle affected with or suspected of pleuro-pneumonia shall with all practicable speed give notice of the fact of the head of cattle being so affected or suspected to a constable of the police force for the police area wherein the head of cattle so affected or suspected is or was. (2) The constable receiving such notice shall immediately transmit the information by telegraph to the Board of Agriculture. (3) The constable shall also forthwith give information of the receipt by him of the notice to an Inspector of the Local Authority, who shall forthwith report the same to the Local Authority. Pa Duty of Inspector to act immediately. (1) An Inspector of a Local Authority on receiving in any manner whatsoever information of the supposed existence of pleuro-pneumonia, or having reasonable ground to suspect the existence of pleuro-pueumonia, shall proceed with all practicable speed to the place where such disease, according to the information received by him, exists, or is suspected to exist, and shall there and elsewhere put in force and discharge the powers and duties conferred and imposed on him as Inspector by or under the Act of 1894 and this Order. (2) The Inspector shall forthwith report to the Board of Agriculture. 246 -INFECTIVE DISEASES. No Movement into or out of Plewro-pnewmonia Infected Place without Licence. Cattle shall not be moved into or out of an Infected Place except with a Movement Licence of an Inspector or officer of the Board, and such cattle shall not be moved except in accordance with the conditions contained in such Licence., Pleuro-pneumonia found in Market, Railway Station, Grazing Park, or other like Place, or during Transit. The Inspector of the Local Authority shall cause to be seized all the cattle affected with pleuro-pneumonia, and also all cattle being in or on the market, fair, sale-yard, place of exhibition, lair, landing-place, wharf, railway station, common, uninclosed land, farm, field, yard, shed, park, or other such place as aforesaid, and shall forthwith transmit the information by telegraph to the Board of Agriculture. The Inspector of the Local Authority shall cause all such cattle so seized to be detained at the place where they are seized, or to be moved to some convenient and isolated place and there detained. Removal of Dung or other Things. Tt shall not be lawful for any person to send or carry, or cause to be sent or carried, on a railway, canal, river, or inland navigation, or in a coasting vessel, or on a highway or thoroughfare, any dung, fodder, or litter that has been in an Infected Place, or that has been in any place in contact with or used about a diseased or suspected head of cattle, except with a Licence of an Inspector or officer of the Board or of an Inspector of the. Local Authority. Report to Board of Cattle that have been in Contact with Cattle affected with Pleuro-pneumonia. Where it appears toa Local Authority that there is within their District any head of cattle which bas been in the same field, shed, or other place, or in the same herd, or otherwise in contact, with any head of cattle affected with pleuro-pneumonia, or otherwise exposed to the infection thereof, the Local Authority shall forthwith report the facts of the case to the Board of Agriculture. Disinfection. An Inspector or officer of the Board may cause or require any shed or other place which has been used for a head of cattle while affected with or suspected of pleuro-pneumonia, and any utensil, pen, hurdle, or other thing used for or about such head of cattle, to be cleansed and disinfected to his satisfaction. Occupiers to give Facilities for Cleansing. *q) The owner and occupier and person in charge of any shed or other place which has been used for any head of cattle while affected with or suspected of pleuro-pneumonia shall give all reasonable facilities to an INFLUENZA. 247 Inspector or officer of the Board for the cleansing and disinfection of such place, and of any utensils, pens, hurdles, or other things used for or about. such cattle. (2) Any person failing to comply with the provisions of this Article shall be deemed guilty of an offence against the Act of 1894. Prohibition to Expose or Move Diseased or Suspected Cattle. (1) It shall not be lawful for any person— (a) To expose a diseased or suspected head of cattle in a market or fair, or in a sale-yard, or other public or private place where cattle are commonly exposed for sale ; or (b) To place a diseased or suspected head of cattle in a lair or other place adjacent to or connected with a market or a fair, or where cattle are commonly placed before exposure for sale ; or (c) To send or carry, or cause to be sent or carried, a diseased or suspected head of cattle on a railway, canal, river, or inland navigation, or in a coasting vessel; or (d) To carry, lead, or drive, or cause to be carried, led, or driven, a diseased or suspected head of cattle on a highway or thorough- fare : or (e) To place or keep a diseased or suspected head of cattle on common or uninclosed land, or in a field or place insufficiently fenced, or in a field adjoining a highway unless that field is so fenced or situate that cattle therein cannot in any manner come in contact with cattle passing along that highway or grazing on the sides thereof ; or (f) To graze a diseased or suspected head of cattle on pasture being on the sides of a highway ; or (g) To allow a diseased or suspected head of cattle to stray on a highway or thoroughfare or on the sides thereof or on common or uninclosed land, or in a field or place insufficiently fenced. INFLUENZA. Influenza is an infectious disease characterised by a catarrh of the respiratory or the gastric mucous membrane, accompanied by great prostration and mental depression, and frequently ending fatally by pneumonic complication, One attack is not protective. The disease has occurred in the form of great epidemics, like the pandemic of 1890, which is said to have started from Bokhara, and travelled to St. Petersburg, Berlin, Paris, and London, whence it spread all over this country. The incubation period is extremely short, only a few hours, so that numbers are attacked almost simultaneously. The occurrence of cases in succession in a family, the importation of the disease by an infected person, and the escape of persons in completely isolated localities, point to the existence of a living contagium. Pfeiffer claims to have identified it with a 248 INFECTIVE DISEASES. bacillus which was found by him in the purulent bronchial secretion, and, by Canon, in the blood. Bacillus of Influenza.—Very small rods, singly or in leptothrix filaments. They stain with the aniline dyes, but not by Gram’s method. They are non-motile and aerobic; they do not grow in gelatine at the temperature of the room. On glycerine-agar very small transparent drop-like colonies develop in about twenty-four hours. In broth there is only a very scanty growth of whitish particles on the surface, which subside and form a woolly deposit. They are found especially in the bronchial -secretion, and only in cases of influenza. Canon obtained them by puncturing the finger, Fic. 121.—Baciiius or INFLuenza. From a culture on gelatine, x 1000. (Itzerorr anp NIEMANN.) and allowing a few drops of the blood to fall upon the surface of glycerine-agar in a Petri’s dish, The organism will retain its vitality for fourteen days in sputum, but is quickly detroyed by drying. It is said that by applying the bacillus to the nasal mucous membrane in monkeys, symptoms similar to influenza were produced. METHOD oF SraINING. To stain the bacilli use Neelsen’s solution or Liffler’s methylene- blue; or the following method :— Canon’s method.—Spread the blood on cover-glasses, allow them to dry, immerse for five minutes in absolute alcohol, and stain in the following solution :— INFLUENZA. 249 Aqueous solution of netbytone rind ong 40 parts; 3 per cent. solution of eosin in 70 per cent. aldohol, 20 parts; distilled water, 40 parts. Float the cover-glasses from three to six hours in a capsule placed in the incubator at 37° C., wash with water, and dry and mount in balsam. The red corpuscles will be stained pink, and the leucocytes, with the bacilli in them, blue. / / ¢ aoe ad 7 au” . Pete ‘ er $ ~ t s eo a ‘ Sweet H SON 8 Sus: % o Ne \ Se , shee Ne v4 Coad gee ? _ Fig. 122.—BaciLtus or INFLUENZA. From a cultivation showing filaments composed of long and short rods, cocci-forms and irregular elements. x 1200. Equine INFLUENZA. Equine influenza, or “ pink-eye,” has been noticed to be prevalent at the same time as epidemics of influenza in man, but there does not appear to be any evidence of intercommunicability or of any relation between the two diseases. CHAPTER XVIII. ORIENTAL PLAGUE,—RELAPSING FEVER.—TYPHUS FEVER.—YELLOW FEVER. THE PLAGuE. THe plague is a highly infectious disease, having its origin in putrefaction and filth, in tropical climates. The virus in its effects resembles that of typhus. The period of incubation varies from a few hours to a week. The disease produces high temperature and decomposition of the blood, and dark hemorrhagic patches appear on the skin, but there is no eruption. Lymphatic inflammation and buboes almost invariably occur. The virus is intensified by warmth and overcrowding in houses, and dissipated by exposure to fresh air. When the plague occurred in this country it was recognised as a foreign pestilence from the East, and once imported it was fostered and intensified in virulence wherever there was filth, putrefaction, and overcrowding. The disease, like the small-pox, was communicated from one person to another. If a case occurred in a house other inmates were liable to suffer from the disease, while visitors to the house ran a similar but less risk. There was a good deal of variation both in the infectivity of the virus and in the susceptibility of individuals, so that one contemporary writer remarked that “no one can account for how it comes to pass that some persons shall receive the infection and others not.” Medical men were credited with enjoying an extraordinary degree of immunity, though there were members of the medical profession who undoubtedly died of the plague. This tradition has been supported, to a certain extent, by the experience of the plague in modern times. In the epidemic in Egypt, in 1835, of the ten French physicians engaged there, only one died; and while those who buried the victims of the plague were liable to suffer from it, and many did so, yet the medical men made more than one hundred post-mortem examinations without any death resulting. 250 THE PLAGUE. 251 The clothes and coverings of the infected often spread the disease, and yet there are numerous examples of persons who without having adopted any method of protection occupied the beds of plague patients without contracting the malady. The plague is transmissible from one country to another by sea. An infected ship becomes an infective centre as readily as an infected house. Once imported, whether by land or sea, the virus from infected persons or merchandise spreads wherever the environment is favourable for its development and extension. Old London afforded in every way a suitable environment for the plague. The situation of the city was unhealthy, and the old town ditch was a receptacle for all kinds of filth. The houses projected over the roadway, and the streets were saturated with constant contributions of slops and of excrement from animals and human beings. The houses were often filthy and unventilated, and the floors strewn with rushes, which were seldom changed. Erasmus goes so far as to say that the rushes were piled the new upon the old for twenty years, and were fouled with spillings of beer, fragments of fish, expectoration, vomit, excrement, and urine. Another very striking insanitary feature of Old London was the overcrowded state of the graveyards, which was well calculated to predispose to pestilence, if not actually to produce it. The burials were so frequent in St. Paul’s Churchyard that a new grave could scarcely be dug without bodies being exposed in all stages of putrefaction. In 1894 the plague broke out in China, with all the symptoms of the fatal bubonic pest of Old London. The disease was confined to the poorest classes and the most overcrowded and most filthy localities. In Canton the deaths exceeded one hundred thousand, and in Hong-Kong numbered about ten thousand. The disease was contagious, and mainly diffused by personal contact. Death occurred, as a rule, in from twenty-four hours to five days. The English and European community escaped, with the exception of a very few out of a large number, mostly soldiers, employed in cleansing the houses. The disease was a specific fever, intensely fatal, accom- panied by high temperature, cerebral congestion, delirium, and the formation of buboes. The buboes consisted of exquisitely painful and swollen lymphatic glands. All the glands, in some cases, were affected. According to Cantlie the glandular swelling when first recognised was almond-shaped in the inguinal region, and globular in other regions, with peri-glandular edema. The swelling rapidly increased in size, becoming softer, less definite in outline, and less tender, until 252 INFECTIVE DISEASES. by the end of five or six days it consisted of an elevated mass, doughy to the touch, almost circular, with a diameter of six inches. The skin over the swelling was livid and dimpled. The swelling was in some cases due to purulent effusion, but more frequently on incision there was only an escape of sero-sanguineous fluid. The cervical glands in very severe cases sometimes attained an enormous size. Three out of seven Japanese medical men were attacked and one died, but none out of eleven English doctors, though they were equally exposed toinfection. Of eight Englishmen attacked seven were among the soldiers employed, and only two died. No nurses or attendants on the sick were attacked. The virus appeared to be intimately connected with filth in the soil. According to the Chinese, rats, poultry, goats, sheep, cows, and buffaloes are susceptible. In the houses and hotels dead rats were found in great numbers : it was said that they emerged from their haunts in sewers and drains, appeared to be dazed, and limped about, owing to the formation of buboes in their hind legs. Rats, mice, and guinea-pigs inoculated with virus from a human lymphatic gland died with development of buboes. It appears to be clearly proved that rats suffer from the plague in common with man, and it has also been suggested that they may serve to spread the disease. Bacilli were found in human blood and in the swollen lymphatic glands by Kitasato, and independently by Yersin. Bacillus of Plague.—Short rods with rounded ends. They stain with aniline dyes, but not by Gram’s method. The stain collects at the ends of the rods, leaving a clear space in the middle. Sometimes the rods are surrounded by a capsule. They are found in abundance in the buboes, and in small numbers in the blood in very serious and rapidly fatal cases. Material from the buboes inoculated on agar gives rise to white transparent colonies, which have an iridescent edge when. examined by reflected light. The bacilli grow more readily on glycerine-agar and on solidified serum. In broth cultures the liquid remains clear, and a flocculent deposit forms on the sides and at the bottom of the vessel. An alkaline solution of peptone 2 per cent., with from 1 to 2 per cent. of gelatine, is the best nutrient medium. In cultures the bacilli develop chains of short rods and well-marked involution forms. Swollen and degenerated forms are found most abundantly in old cultures, and stain with difficulty. Mice, rats, and guinea-pigs, inoculated with bubonic tissue, die in a few days, numerous bacilli being found in the lymphatic glands, THE PLAGUE. 253 spleen, and blood. Guinea-pigs die in from two to five days, and mice in one to three days. In guinea-pigs after some hours there is cedema at the seat of inoculation, and the lymphatic glands are swollen. After twenty- four hours the animal refuses to eat, has a staring coat, and after a time suddenly falls on its side, and is attacked by convulsions, which become more and more frequent until death occurs. After death the seat of inoculation is found to be extensively edematous, and the neighbouring lymphatic glands enlarged and filled with bacilli, The intestine is often congested, and the liver is Fic. 123.—Bacitui or PLacuE aND PHacocyTeEs, x 800. From human lymphatic gland. (Aoyama.) congested and enlarged. In less acute cases an abscess of the abdominal wall occasionally results. The bacilli are sometimes found in the pleural and peritoneal exudation. The liver and spleen also contain many bacilli. Those in the blood are a little longer than those in the lymphatic glands. Inoculations can readily be made from guinea-pig to guinea- pig by using the pulp of the spleen, or the blood. Cultures lose their virulence gradually, but the virus can be intensified by successive inoculations in animals. The disease is infectious to mice as well as inoculable. Pigeons are insusceptible, Rats and flies may convey the bacilli. According to Aoyama, the bacilli found in the blood of plague 254 INFECTIVE DISEASES. patients and in the buboes are not identical. The bacilli in the buboes are different in form, and they stain by Gram’s method. There is no doubt that the micro-organism which was found in blood is very similar to the bacillus of fowl cholera, and it is quite possible that the so-called plague bacillus is really identical with the bacillus of hemorrhagic septicemia, and that the real nature of the contagium in bubonic plague is unknown. Protective Inoculation.—Yersin, Calmette, and Borrell claim not only to have produced immunity, but to have cured animals after infection. Cultures on agar heated to 58° C. for an hour were attenuated, and rabbits after intravenous or subcutaneous inoculation were protected against virulent cultures. The serum of immunised rabbits was capable of protecting from subsequent virulent cultures, and neutralising the effect of a previous inoculation of a virulent culture. A horse was inoculated with cultures which killed mice in two days, and after six weeks a serum was obtained which produced immunity in mice and guinea-pigs. Stamping-out System.—It is not until the sixteenth century that we hear of preventive measures being attempted in England, and then they appear to have been adopted only when an outbreak threatened to be very serious. Early in the sixteenth century all those who had the plague in their houses were ordered to put up wisps, and to carry white rods in their hands. In 1543 the Plague Order of Henry VIII. was issued. In place of wisps the sign of the cross was to be made on every infected house, and to remain there for forty days. Persons afflicted with the disease were to refrain, if possible, from going out of doors, or for forty days to carry a white rod in the hand. All straw from the infected houses was to be carried into the fields and burnt. Churchwardens were directed to keep beggars out of churches on holy days, and all streets and lanes were to be cleansed. In 1547 the means of notification was a blue cross with the addition of the inscription Lord have mercy upon us. Later on the colour of the cross was changed to red. With the outburst of the plague in 1563, came an attempt to enforce a terrible system of compulsorily shutting up infected families. The doors and windows in such houses were to be closed, and no inmates were to leave the premises and no visitors to be allowed for forty days. No better incubator on a large scale could possibly have been devised for both breeding and intensifying the virulence of the plague bacillus, or whatever may be the contagium vivum of this disease. This compulsory shutting up of the sick with the healthy amounted to a compulsory infection of many of the unfortunate inmates who might THE PLAGUE. 255 otherwise have escaped, and very naturally the order was frequently infringed. In 1568 the Lord Mayor of London drew up instructions for the Aldermen for dealing with the plague. It was enacted that constables and officers should search out infected houses and report to the authorities, In other words, that there should be notification by the police. All infected houses were to be shut up, and no person to be allowed to come out for twenty days, All bedding and clothes used by the victims were to be destroyed. At Westminster these instructions were to be enforced under a penalty of seven days in the stocks, with imprisonment to follow, making in all a punishment of forty days. In 1581 the Lord Mayor transferred notification from the constables to searchers. Two honest and discreet matrons in every parish were to search the body of every such person that happened to die in the parish. They were ordered to make a true report to the clerk of the parish, and the said clerk had to report to the wardens of the parish. For failing to notify, the penalty was an exemplary term of imprisonment. The searchers were of course likely to be offered heavy bribes by the people to suppress reports, owing to their anxiety to avoid the shutting up of infected houses. i The continued prevalence of the plague led to the publication, in 1593, of a book by Simon Kellwaye. One chapter ‘‘teacheth what orders magistrates and rulers of citties and towns should cause to be observed,” which included among other regulations that no dunghills were to be allowed near the city, and the streets were to be watered and cleansed. F No surgeons or barbers who let blood were to cast the’ same into the streets. All those visiting and attending the sick to carry something in their hand to be known from other people ; and if the infection were in few places, all the people were to be kept in their houses during the time of their visitation, and when this was over, all clothes, bedding, and other such things used upon the sick, were to be burnt. In 1603 Thomas Lodge recommended that discreet and skilful men should be appointed in every parish to notify sickness to the authorities, and so cause them to be visited by expert physicians, and that such as were sick should be separated from the whole, and that isolation hospitals should be built outside the City in separate and unfrequented places. In 1665 the Great Plague of London occurred, and was attributed by some to the importation of an infected bale of silks from the Levant. According to Hodges the disease stayed among the common people, and hence was called The Poor's Plague. He criticised the system of shutting up infected houses, and strongly recommended that those who were untouched in infected houses should receive “ accommodation outside the city.” The sick were to be removed to convenient apartments provided on purpose for them. To quote his own words, “ Timely separation of the infected from the well is absolutely necessary to be done.” For the purification of houses his directions were to place “a chafing 256 INFECTIVE DISEASES, dish in the middle of the room, where proper things were burnt and exbaled all around.” The use of sulphur and quicklime was mentioned. * Preventive measures were drawn up and published by the Lord Mayor and Aldermen. Examiners in Health, watchmen, and searchers were appointed. Surgeons were selected to assist the searchers in making their reports, and a fee of twelve pence was allowed for every case. The disease was immediately notified to the Examiner of Health. Rules for disinfec- tion were made, and every infected house was shut up, and no one removed except to a pest-house or tent. Orders were issued for cleaning and sweep- ing the streets. Hackney coaches were not to be used after conveying patients to the pest-house until they had been well aired, Regulations were also made dealing with loose persons, assemblies, and drinking taverns. The plague was scarcely over before the whole city was in flames. A new city speedily rose upon the ashes of Old London. A few sporadic cases of plague are given in the London Bills of Mortality down to 1679, when they finally ceased. London was sterilised by the great fire. “ Great as this calamity was,” wrote Thomas Pennant, ‘yet it proved the provi- dential cause of putting a stop to one of far more tremendous nature. The plague, which, for a series of ages, had, with very short intervals, visited our capital in its most dreadful forms, never appeared there again after the rebuilding of the city in a more open and airy manner ; which removed several nuisances, which if not the origin of a plague, was assuredly one great pabulum, when it had seized our streets.” In the years 1720-22 there was a terrible outburst of plague in France. It was attributed at Marseilles to importation by a ship from Syria. This caused a panic in England, and the Lords Justices considered it necessary for the public safety that measures should be taken to defend the country from a fresh invasion of this disease. Dr. Richard Mead was entrusted with drawing up the required recommendations. Mead laid it down as an essential doctrine that the plague was not native to this country, and therefore the first thing was to prevent importation, and if such a misfor- tune occurred, it was to be prevented from spreading. How was this to be accomplished? Briefly stated, his system was as follows : Lazarettoes were to be provided for the reception of infected men and merchandise. The healthy were to change their clothes and to be kept in quarantine, and the sick were to be kept remote from the healthy and their clothes. destroyed, If, through a miscarriage in the public care, by the neglect of officers or otherwise, the disease was imported, then “the civil magistrates were to make it as much for the interest of the afflicted families to discover: * During outbreaks of the plague amulets were extremely popular. Walnuts filled with mercury, pieces of cloth coated with arsenic, and arsenical cakes,. were very generally worn. The College of Physicians recommended issues on the arms and legs. Dr. Hodges wrote, that the more of the ulcers that were made the better, although their largeness answered as well as more in number. If two issues were preferred, it was recommended to make one on the left arm and the other on the opposite leg. A somewhat similar plan was adopted in Circassia by small-pox inoculators. RELAPSING FEVER. 257 their misfortune, as it was when a house was on fire, to call in the assistance of the neighbourhood.” ‘The shutting up of infected houses was condemned in the strongest terms, and a system of notification and isolation was proposed on the lines originally suggested by Dr. Hodges. 1. A Council of Health was to be established, and entrusted with such powers as might enable them to see all their orders executed with im- partial justice. 2. Notificution.—The ignorant old women employed as searchers were to be replaced by understanding and diligent men, who were to report cases immediately to the Council of Health. 3. Isolation.—Physicians were at once to be despatched to visit the suspected cases, and when the suspicion of plague was confirmed, all the families in which the sickness occurred were to be isolated. The sick were to be separated from the sound, and isolation houses to be provided three or four miles out of the town. The removal of the sick was to be made at night, so as to avoid the danger of spreading infection, and all possible care was to be taken to provide such means of conveyance for the sick that they might receive no injury. The poor were to be isolated in houses provided for the purpose, but the rich were to be allowed to be in their own homes provided that care was taken to separate the healthy from the sick, and no pains were to be spared to provide clean and airy apartments. All expenses were to be paid by the public, and a reward was to be given to the person who made the first discovery of infection in any place. Mead further pointed out that general sanitation must be carefully attended to. Officers were to see that the streets were washed and kept clean from filth, carrion, and all manner of nuisances. Beggars and idle persons were to be taken up, and such miserable objects as were fit neither for the hospitals nor for the workhouses, were to be provided for in an establishment for incurables. Houses also were to be kept clean, and sulphur was to be used as a disinfectant. After centuries of experience we have learnt that the necessary conditions for avoiding the plague are more accurate knowledge on the part of the profession and the public of the way in which the disease spreads, and the adoption of sanitary precautions, which must include personal cleanliness, sanitary dwellings, absence of overcrowd- ing, immediate notification, prompt separation of the sick from the healthy, disinfection of infected dwellings, destruction of infected clothing, and extra-mural burial or, better still, cremation. It was because the very reverse of these sanitary conditions existed that the virus of the plague found a suitable environment in Old London and in recent times in Hong-Kong. Revapsina FEvER. Relapsing or famine fever is a contagious disease producing a state of high fever lasting about seven days, followed by apparent 17 258 INFECTIVE DISEASES. recovery, and in about fourteen days by another attack of fever, which may be repeated after another week. Starvation, in association with overcrowding and filth, is intimately connected with the causation of the disease. The subjects of -the disease contaminate the air around them, and the virus is principally conveyed by tramps and dirty people. Obermeier discovered spirilla in the blood during the paroxysms of fever. The constant occurrence of the spirillum in relapsing fever, and the fact of its not being found in any other conditions, render it very probable that it is the cause of the disease. Fic. 124.—Spritium OBERMEIERI IN BLoop or Monxkry INocULATED WITH SPIRILLA AFTER REMOVAL OF THE SPLEEN (SOUDAKEWITCH). Spirillum Obermeieri (Spirocheta Obermeieri, Cohn).— Threads similar to the Spirillum plicatile. In length they are mostly 16 to 40 mw, with regular screw-curves. They move very rapidly, and exhibit peculiar wave-like undulations. They are absent from the blood during the non-febrile intervals, but are found in the interior of leucocytes in the spleen. In blood serum and 50 per cent. salt solution, they preserve their movements. In cover-glass preparations they are readily stained by any of the aniline dyes, and in sections, by preference, with Bismarck brown. They are not TYPHUS FEVER.—YELLOW FEVER. 259 found in the urine, sweat, or saliva. They have not been cultivated artificially on any nutrient media. Monkeys have been successfully inoculated with blood containing the spirilla by Koch, Carter and Soudakewitch ; and Koch found the spirilla in the vessels of the brain, liver, and kidneys, after death. According to Soudakewitch a fatal result is produced in monkeys if the spléen is removed, and the spirilla are found in great numbers in the blood; but if the spleen is not excised the spirilla rapidly disappear, and recovery follows. Miinch and Motschutkowsky transferred blood containing the spirilla to healthy persons, and produced typical relapsing fever. TypHus Fever. Typhus fever is a highly contagious disease, which lasts for two or three weeks, and produces a measly eruption. Like the plague, it is intimately associated with overcrowding and filth, and is liable to occur where these conditions exist in cities, in armies, and in prisons. The virus produces profound changes in the blood, and after death the internal organs are found to be congested, especially the lungs, which are very friable. The spleen is softened and often enlarged, and the blood is dark and imperfectly coagulated. The virus is dissipated by fresh air. It is given off by the breath of patients, and possibly from the skin. It clings to the clothes of patients, and the disease may be conveyed by their agency. One attack, as a rule, confers immunity. Some persons are naturally insusceptible, failing to contract the disease though daily exposed to it. Hlava has described a bacterium which he believes to be the specific micro-organism, Thoinot and Calmette found the same bacterium with others, but there was no particular micro-organism constantly present. There can be little’ doubt that the nature of the contagium is unknown. Stamping-out System.—Sanitary precautions, and especially the operation of the Public Health Acts in relation to lodging- houses, prisons, and the better housing of the working classes, have been instrumental in almost completely stamping out the disease in this country. YELLOW FEVER. Yellow fever is a disease of tropical climates, characterised by abdominal tenderness, hemorrhagic vomiting (black-vomit), and jaundice. The disease may end fatally, or recovery occur in about two or three weeks. It is especially prevalent in the West Indies and in parts of North and South America. 260 INFECTIVE DISEASES. The virus may be conveyed by infected ships, and has in this way made its appearance at British and French seaport towns. The disease is generally believed to be contagious, but the source of the virus is not known. According to Sternberg the virus is not conveyed by water, but spreads where there is overcrowding and filth. Bacteria in Yellow Fever.—Freire asserts that there is a specific micrococeus in yellow fever which can be grown on all ordinary nutrient media, and that cultures can be used for protective inoculation with satisfactory results. Carmonay Valle also claims to have discovered the contagium ; but Sternberg, who has carried ‘on investigations extending over several years, maintains that there is no characteristic micro-organism present in the blood or in the tissues after death. Aerobic and anaerobic cultures were made from the blood, liver, kidney, urine, stomach, and intestines. The liver was found to contain after death a number of bacilli, most frequently Bacillus coli communis and Bacillus cadaveris. Blood or fresh liver does not produce any disease in rabbits or guinea-pigs, but liver tissue kept for forty-eight hours and inoculated subcutaneously in guinea-pigs is extremely pathogenic. Similar results occur after inoculation of healthy liver which has been kept in the same way. We may conclude from these experiments that the nature of the contagium is unknown. Stamping-out System.—Sternberg states that there are many facts relating to the origin and extension of yellow fever epidemics which support the theory that the virus is present in the evacua- tions, and that accumulations of fecal matter and of organic material of animal origin furnish in certain climates a suitable soil for the development of the contagium. According to this view the evacuations should be thoroughly disinfected, and with other sanitary precautions and efficient quarantine at seaports, the disease may be stamped out, and the danger of importation from the natural home of the disease reduced to a minimum, CHAPTER XIX. SCARLET FEVER.—MEASLES. ScaRLer FEvEr. ScarLet Fever is a highly contagious disease peculiar to man. It produces inflammation of the tonsils and adjoining parts, fever, and a general punctiform eruption. The period of incubation is about, a week, and the rash usually appears on the second day. In some cases the disease manifests itself in an extremely mild form, known as latent scarlet fever, in which there is only a slight febrile attack, or a mild sore throat, with very little or no rash. Many cases would not be recognisable as such if they were not capable of conveying scarlet fever, or unless other cases followed or occurred simultaneously which were undoubtedly typical cases of the disease. The occurrence of such cases in the early history of an epidemic often causes the greatest difficulty in tracing the origin of the outbreak, and indeed in some cases renders it quite impossible to do so. The virus is given off by the skin, in desquamation, and possibly by the urine. It maintains its vitality in clothing for months, and sometimes longer. It may also be conveyed by the hands of the physician to women during parturition. The disease may be transferred by subcutaneously inoculating persons, who have not previously contracted scarlet fever, with virus obtained by puncturing the eruption on the skin. ‘After death the internal organs appear to the naked eye more or less healthy. The liver is soft, the kidneys are congested, the ileum is inflamed, and Peyer’s patches enlarged and congested; but these conditions are also produced by other causes. There are inflam- matory changes in the lymphatic follicles of the tonsils, and the larynx and trachea. Other morbid lesions, especially in the kidneys, are associated with the sequele and complications, and though commonly occurring in scarlet fever are also found in other diseases. 261 262 INFECTIVE DISEASES. These changes appear to be due to the poison which is in the blood, and is excreted by the kidneys. The epithelium is in a state of cloudy swelling, a condition found in other febrile diseases and in septic poisoning. Bacteria in Scarlet Fever.—The occurrence of micro-organ- isms in cases of scarlet fever has been observed by several investi- gators—Coze and Feltz, Crooke, Léfiler, Babés, Heubner and Bahrdt, and notably by Frankel and Freudenberg, and more recently by Klein, the author, Raskin, and others. Coze and Feltz found cocci in the blood, and Crooke, in cases of scarlet fever with severely affected throat, found bacilli, cocci, and streptococci in the organs of the throat, and cocci in the internal organs. Crooke left it an open question whether these cocci were the specific organisms of scarlet fever, or were to be regarded as diphtheritic or septic associates. He inclined, for clinical reasons, to the latter view. Loffler, in cases of scarlatinal diphtheria, found the same chain- forming micrococeus which he had found in typical diphtheria. Babés was able constantly to prove the presence of « strepto- coccus in inflammatory products secondary to scarlatina. Heubner and Bahrdt, in a fatal case of scarlet fever in a boy, complicated with suppuration of the finger and knee-joints, and with pericarditis, found a streptococcus identical in form with Strepto- coceus pyogenes, but cultivations were not made. The secondary infection started from diphtheritically affected tonsils, which were followed by retro-pharyngeal abscesses. Frinkel and Freudenberg examined, for micro-organisms, three cases of scarlatina with well-marked affection of the throat. In all three cases they obtained cultivations of cocci from the submaxillary lymphatic glands, spleen, liver, and kidney. These cocci could not be distinguished from Streptococcus pyogenes derived from pus, nor from the undoubtedly identical streptococcus which one of them (A. Frankel) had repeatedly cultivated in large numbers from puerperal affections. In two of the cases Streptococcus pyogenes was the only organism present, and in all three cases it was far in excess of other colonies which developed. The organisms were also found in sections of the organs by microscopical examination. Frankel and Freudenberg could in no way distinguish the strepto- coccus in scarlatina from the streptococcus in pyemia and septi- cemia. The identity of this streptococcus with Streptococcus pyogenes and Streptococcus puerperalis was established by comparison of their macroscopical and microscopical appearances in cultivations on SCARLET FEVER. 263 nutrient agar-agar, nutrient gelatine, and in broth, both at the ordinary and at higher temperatures, and also by experiments on animals. They concluded that it could be stated with certainty that the organisms in question did not stand in causal relation to searlet fever. They considered that special methods of microscopical and biological research were apparently needed for demonstrating the true scarlet fever contagium, which probably was especially present in the skin. They considered that the presence of the —_ a. b. Cc. Fic. 125.—Pure-CurtivaTions or STREPTOCOCCUS PYOGENES. (a) On the surface of nutrient gelatine; (b) In the depth of nutrient gelatine ; (c) On the surface of nutrient agar. streptococcus was due to a secondary infection, to which the door was opened by the lesions of the throat—a view which was sup- ported by the fact that the organisms were found in submaxillary lymphatic glands. They preferred to use the term “secondary ” to “complicated” or “combined” infection, because this expresses the fact that by the effect of the scarlatinal virus the soil is rendered suitable for this ubiquitous microbe when it has once gained an entrance. This streptococcus was found by Klein in five out of eleven cases 264 INFECTIVE DISEASES. of scarlet fever in man, twice in association with certain other micro-organisms, and three times alone. The micro-organisms were isolated by inoculating tubes of nutrient gelatine, solidified obliquely, by streaking the surface with blood taken from the finger, the arm, or the heart after death. Those cases from which the organism was obtained were all cases with ulcerated throat, and the culture experiments, from the living patient, were made on or about the day at which the temperature was at its maximum, e iti Source , icro-Organisms Death or Name of Patient. Oe a aid. ca eolaiad: Recovery. 1) L— F—_. Severely | Finger Streptococcus Ultimately aged 5 ulcerated ‘ recovered, ‘ Staphylococcus 2; K— jf aa Much eee aureus Died of 2 : u micro- Z age ulcerated o me ee c pyemia. Streptococcus 3) H—— L—. | Ulcerated ‘i Staphylococcus aged 8 Uae oni Recovered. 4 (a woman), Much Arm None (Not stated.] aged 40 ulcerated 5 (a girl), » s » aged 19 6}; B— AT ae Ulcerated | Finger Streptococcus Recovered, age 7; E——W—, Much a 4 None [Not stated.] aged 22 ulcerated i 8| R—— H——, | Ulcerated ae od es ro aged 8 i 9| F G—, re Heart | Streptococcus Died. aged 23 | 10; ss _— ‘3 | None 4 aged 3 11 R— B——., Advanced 45 | F - aged 20 months | ulceration | Klein regards this streptococcus as the actual cause of scarlet fever in man. The author, Raskin, Holmes, and others who have investigated this subject agree with the conclusions of Frankel and Freudenberg. The author is convinced that the streptococci in suppuration, puerperal septicemia, pyeemia, and septicemia, and in certain cases of measles, searlatina, and diphtheria, are identical; and from overwhelming evidence we are justified in concluding that—(1) The nature of the contagium of scarlet fever is unknown. (2) The streptococcus regarded by Klein as the contagium is the Streptococcus pyogenes. MILK-SCARLATINA. 265 (8) This streptococcus is found, sometimes in company with Staphylo- coccus pyogenes aureus, as a secondary result in scarlet fever and many other diseases, and its exact relation to scarlet fever and its identity with the streptococcus from pus and puerperal fever, were definitely established in 1885 by Frankel and Freudenberg. MiLK-Scaratina. It would not be necessary to say anything further on the etiology of scarlet fever if the generally accepted belief, that scarlet fever is a disease peculiar to man, were accepted by the Medical Department of the Local Government Board; but the theory is officially held that scarlet fever is in its origin a disease of cows. Bovine scarlatina is supposed to be an eruptive disease of the teats, and it is maintained that the virus, by contaminating the milk, produces scarlet fever in the human subject. As this theory is very naturally accepted by many medical officers of health, and is mentioned in English medical text-books, it will be necessary to discuss this question in considerable detail, and especially as these opinions were promulgated in this country with official support, and have since been proved to be erroneous. The theory of the origin of the exanthemata in diseases of the lower animals is a very old one. The Arabians imagined that small- pox arose from the camel. Jenner adopted a similar theory, and expressed his belief that small-pox originated in the horse, being generated by horses suffering with “greasy” hocks. Thus Jenner wrote: “‘ May not accidental circumstances have again and again arisen, still working new changes upon it, until it has acquired the contagious and malignant form ‘under which we now com- monly see it, making its devastations among us? and from a consideration of the change which the infectious matter undergoes from producing a disease in the cow, may we not conceive that many contagious diseases now prevalent amongst us may owe their present appearance, not to a simple, but a compound origin? For example, is it difficult to imagine that measles, scarlet fever, ulcerated sore throats, and spotted skin, all spring from the same source, assuming some variety in their forms according to the nature of their new combinations?” Baron informs us that this idea was prevalent in Jenner’s mind as early as 1787. It is related that in that year he accompanied his nephew, George Jenner, into a stable to look at a horse with diseased heels, and, pointing to them, he remarked : “ There is the source of small-pox. I have much to say 266 INFECTIVE DISEASES. on that subject which I hope in due time to give to the world.” And again in 1794, when writing in connection with this subject, he adds: “ Domestication of animals has certainly provided a prolific source of diseases among man.” Jenner’s views were found to be incorrect, and it was shown by Loy and others that the grease bears no relation to cow-pox, and it is now known that Jenner mistook horse-pox for the disease known as the grease. No one at the present day supports Jenner’s theory of small-pox in man arising from any disease of the horse. Indeed, the origin of small-pox from a disease of the horse was not upheld even by Jenner’s pupil and nephew, Henry Jenner. The latter promulgated the idea that small-pox originated from the cow. Tle believed that small-pox, in fact, was cow-pox intensified in its virulence by being passed through man. He thus expressed himself - “Nor may it, perhaps, be too hypothetical to suppose that the cow-pox may possibly be the small-pox in its original unadulterated state, before it became contaminated by passing through the impure and scrofulous habits of human constitutions.” The theory of the origin, in animals, of human febrile diseases was, later, advocated by Copland, who stated, firstly, that scarlet fever in man was originally a disease of the horse, and that it formerly occurred, and had recently occurred, epidemically as an epizootic among horses; secondly, that it was communicated in comparatively modern times from horses to man; thirdly, that it might be, and had been, communicated to the dog. But this opinion has not been accepted, for the disease called scarlatina in the horse is a non-infectious disease, generally attack- ing but one or two horses in a large stud. It neither spreads by contagion nor infection ; and Williams states that it is impossible to transmit it from the horde to-any other animal, and that many cases of the so-called scarlatina of the horse are in reality identical with purpura. The theory was again revived, but in another form, i has been adopted by the Medical Degarkneut of the Local Government Board. Owing to failure in tracing,'in some cases of milk scarla- tina, the contamination of the milk from a human source, the theory was started that in such eases the disease is derived from the cow—that, in other words, there is a disease, scarlet fever in the cow, which is responsible for outbreaks of scarlet fever in man. In 1882 an epidemic of scarlatina in St. Giles and St. Pancras was investigated by Mr. W. H. Power for the Board. The disease was distributed with a milk supply from a Surrey farm. In this case MILK-SCARLATINA. 267 two facts were ascertained : the one, that a cow recently come into milk had been suffering from some ailment from the time of her parturition, of which loss of hair in patches was the most con- spicuous manifestation ; the other, that there existed no discoverable means by which the milk could have received infective quality from the human subject. Tn 1885 an outbreak of scarlet fever occurred in Marylebone in connection with milk from a farm at Hendon, and again Power failed to establish infection from any human source in any commonly accepted way—such, for example, as handling of milk, or milk utensils, by persons carrying scarlatina infection. But on examining the cows with a view to ascertain any new condition pertaining to them, it came to light during the inquiry that some of them, which had recently been introduced from Derbyshire, were suffering from a vesicular disease of the teats. At this stage Klein became associated with Power in the inquiry; and their belief in the existence of a disease among the cows on the farm capable of producing scarlatina among human consumers of the cow’s milk, became unreserved. Klein took away with him samples of milk, contents of vesicles, and discharges from ulcers, and afterwards two of the cows were purchased and kept under observation. Dr. Cameron of Hendon has given a detailed description of the clinical history of this disease. He expressed his belief that it was a specific disease capable of being communicated to healthy cows by direct inoculation of the teats with virus conveyed by the milker from a diseased animal. The condition of the teats is described as follows: The teats became enlarged, swollen to nearly twice their natural size, and edematous. On handling them there was no feeling of induration. Vesicles appeared on the swollen teats and upon the udder between or near the teats. These varied in number from two to four on a teat, and in size from a pea to a horsebean. The vesicle contained a clear fluid. The vesicles were rubbed and broken in milking, and left raw sores, sometimes red, in other cases pale in colour, with raised, ulcerated edges. Sometimes a few accessory vesicles formed around the margin of these ulcerated sores. After the rupture of the vesicle a brown scab formed, which might remain attached for five or six weeks, or fall off in ten days or a fortnight, a smaller one forming afterwards. A thin, watery fluid exuded from under the scab, and the sore ultimately healed. Cameron examined the teats of several cows five or six weeks 268 INFECTIVE DISEASES. after they were attacked. The scabs then varied in size from a shilling to a florin; they were about one-eighth of an inch thick in the centre, thinning off towards the edges. Some of the cows were also suffering from an eruption on the rump and hind quarter, consisting of patches of eczematous crusts. When a crust was picked off, the hair came off with it, exposing a raw, moist sore, the crusts and sores looking exactly like eczematous scabs and sores; but this condition corresponds in description with eczema, the result of ringworm which is very common in young stock, In addition to his own observations, Cameron obtained infor- mation from the farmers, and others familiar with cows, who thought they recognised in the disease at the farm one stage of a disease which they were able to describe. Cameron thus gives an account of what he and his informants together would regard as a connected clinical history of the disease. He did not see the earlier symptoms, and hence these were of necessity learnt from other persons. The account, therefore, of these symptoms was to be held liable to future correction or modification. Cameron stated that he learnt this disease was capable of being communicated to milkers by inoculation with virus from the vesicles on the teats, though the milkers on the Hendon farm escaped. ‘“ A trusty informant received the virus into a recent scratch on the forefinger while milking a diseased cow. General weakness, malaise, and loss of appetite resulted, and after about four or five days a vesicle or small blister appeared on the finger. This broke, and several others formed on the back of the hand. The whole hand and fingers became swollen and inflamed, the inflammation extending in broad lines as far as the elbow. The general disturbance lasted a fortnight.” In the course of the inquiry, Cameron adds that it was strongly asserted by several people, who examined the cows, that they were suffering from cow-pox. He, however, dismissed the diagnosis of cow-pox on the ground that no papule had been observed or subsequent formation of pustule, areola, or pitting, and because the vesicles were not umbilicated. These reasons given for dismissing the diagnosis of cow-pox at Hendon were totally inadequate ; a comparison having been made between the characters of the eruption of vaccinia as it appears on an infant’s arm, instead of the eruption of the natural or so-called spontaneous disease on the teats of the cow. MILK-SCARLATINA. 269 Klein stated that on the teats and udders of two cows whicli he investigated there were several flat irregular ulcers, varying in diameter from one-quarter to three-quarters of an inch. Some ulcers were more or less circular, others extended in a longitudinal direction on the teat. The ulcers were covered with a brownish or reddish-brown scab. The animals looked thin, but not strikingly so. In feeding capacity, milking power, and body temperature there was nothing abnormal. Four calves were inoculated in the corium of the groin and the inside of the ear, with scrapings from the ulcers after removal of the crusts. In one, which may be taken as an example of the result obtained, there was vesiculation at the margin of the spot inoculated, and in the centre the commencement of the formation of a crust. On the seventh day each sore on the ear had enlarged to about half an inch in breadth, and was covered in its whole extent by a brownish crust. On the eighteenth day they had all healed up and become converted into flat scars. To search for micro-organisms, Klein removed the crust from an ulcer on the teat, scraped off the most superficial layer, squeezed the ulcer, and made cover-glass preparations. Tubes of nutrient gelatine and nutrient agar-agar were also inoculated, and a streptococcus was isolated which in morphological and cultural characters agreed with those of Streptococcus pyogenes. Two calves were inoculated in the groin with the cultivated micro-organism. One calf died in twenty-seven days. At the necropsy there were found peritonitis, and hemorrhagic spots on the omentum; the liver, kidneys, and lungs were congested, and there were petechiz under the pleura, and pericarditis. The second calf was killed, and at the necropsy the lungs and kidneys were congested, and there were hemorrhagic patches on the spleen. In these cases, the post-mortem appearances and anatomical features recalled to Klein the lesions of scarlatina. In the kidney, for example, the cortex was congested, and there were hemorrhages, glomerulo-nephritis, and granular or opaque swelling of the epithelial cells and infiltration with round cells. From the blood of the heart the streptococcus, which had been used in the inoculation, was recovered. In view of this evidence it was con- cluded that the streptococcus was the virus of the cow disease, and ‘that it produced in calves a disease very closely resembling that of scarlatina in man. Two of the cows selected from the Hendon farm were killed, and it was observed in one that the lungs were congested, and 270 INFECTIVE DISEASES. that there were numerous adhesions by recent soft lymph between the lower lobes of the lung and the costal pleura. In the liver there were several reddish streaks and patches. The spleen and kidneys, with the exception of slight congestion, appeared normal. Sections of the kidney showed well-marked glomerulo-nephritis and infiltration of the sheath of the cortical arterioles with numerous round cells. The epithelium of the convoluted tubules was swollen, opaque, and in many places disintegrating. In the other cow there was great congestion of the lungs and pleural adhesions ; the cortex of the kidney was congested, but its medulla was pale. On microscopic examination there was a good deal of round- celled infiltration in the walls of the infundibula and bronchi in the Inng, and round the arterioles in the kidney. In sections of the ulcers on the teats, the corium was found to be infiltrated throughout the whole extent of the ulcer with round cells. In the superficial layers of the stratum Malpighi, close to the stratum lucidum, as also in the stratum lucidum itself, there were numerous cavities of different sizes. These cavities lay side by side, the most superficial ones being covered by the stratum lucidum, or extending between the layers of this stratum. At the marginal parts the cavities, although placed side by side, were well separated from one another by thicker or thinner trabecule, composed of epithelium, while at or near the centre of the ulcer these trabecule were destroyed, the cavities had become confluent, and the covering layers of the cuticle having here also given way, their contents extended on to the free surface of the ulcer. In short, Klein states that all the anatomical details of the distribution and arrangement of these cavities recalled vividly the conditions observed in the vesicles of cow-pox. Yet as a result of this investigation he concluded that the cow disease at Hendon was bovine scarlatina, and that towards its study and supervision every effort ought to be directed in order to check the spread of scarlet fever in man. As a result of this conclusion, the Board of Agriculture resolved to have the whole subject fully investigated, and the author was directed to study the bacteriology and micro-pathology of this disease and to report thereon. Professor Axe investigated the origin of the outbreak of the disease in the cows, and Professor M‘Fadyean carried out an investigation into the possibility of inoculating cows with the virus from cases of scarlet fever in man. MILK-SCARLATINA. 271 Tur AvutHor’s INVESTIGATION. An outbreak of an eruptive disease of the teats, alleged to be identical with the so-called Hendon cow disease, was raging in some farms in Wiltshire. In this case every facility was given by the owner of the estate for a thorough investigation into the disease. Not only were animals sent from the farm to London, but the author was allowed to visit the farms, to inspect all the infected animals, and to make every investigation, with the hearty co- operation of the bailiff of the farms, and the voluntary assistance of the head cowmen and those under them. Some of these cowmen were unusually intelligent, while two had had experience of cows for more than half a century. Thus, there was not only every opportunity for studying the disease on the lines indicated by Klein, but it was possible by repeated visits to the farms to enter into the clinical history of the disease in the cow, to study very fully the nature of the disease on the hands of the milkers, and to trace the probable mode of its introduction on the estate, and the way in which it spread from one part of the herd to another. Two cows were sent to London with disease of the teats and of the udder between the teats. On the right teats of one there were numerous sores, covered with crusts varying in size and in thickness, and generally fissured. In some they were flat, in others conical ; some were with difficulty removed with forceps, others were readily detached. The crusts varied in colour from reddish-brown to very dark brown or almost black. On detaching or scraping « crust there was a granulating and somewhat indurated base. On the right anterior teat there were several ulcers, from which appa- rently the thick crusts had been detached, and new scabs were forming. On the left posterior teat there were unusually large, dark brown, or blackish crusts, covering a very extensive area of ulceration, extending over the whole of the lower third of the teat. In the other cow from Wiltshire there was the same disease on the teats, but not in such a severe form. The sores were covered with thick crusts, but though varying in size they were more regular in form, and more circumscribed. Having entirely removed the crusts from some of the ulcers, a number of inoculations in nutrient gelatine and nutrient agar-agar were made from the discharge, and cover-glass preparations were made and stained in the ordinary way. Cultures were obtained of the organisms commonly found in pus. 272 INFECTIVE DISEASES. With the discharge and with scrapings from the ulcers two calves were inoculated. Of the two calves, one was inoculated by scarification in both ears; the other, a small calf, was scarified in the left ear. Scrapings from the ulcers were rubbed into the places thus prepared. In addition, in the small calf an incision was made through the corium in the left groin, scrapings from different ulcers on the teats were well rubbed in with the blade of the scalpel, and a portion of crust inserted into a small pocket in the subcutaneous tissue. In the ears and the groin there were positive results. In the large brown calf one of two places inoculated in the right ear passed through the following changes : On the third day there was apparent vesiculation and commencing formation of crust. From day to day the crust thickened, and on the eighth day the crust was at its height and detached at its edges. By removing the scab an ulcer was exposed ; there was slight inflammatory thickening. About the thirteenth day the ulcer had quite healed. Very similar appearances resulted in the ear of the smaller calf. The result of inoculation in the groin was of a very much severer character. In the course of two or three days the incision had apparently commenced to heal by scabbing, but there was a surround- ing area which was inflamed, and painful on manipulation. The inflammatory thickening which resulted continued to increase around the seat of inoculation, and the thickening could he felt to extend deeply into the groin. Suppuration followed, and on firm pressure pus welled up through the wound. The wound then showed very little disposition to heal, and the calf began to exhibit marked constitutional symptoms. During the second week after inoculation the animal became very dull, and was reported by the attendant as refusing to feed. Diarrhea supervened, and lasted for several days, and bloody urine was passed. The calf was also noticed to cough, and the cough gradually increased in severity. Thirty-six days after the date of inoculation it was decided to kill the calf and examine the condition of the viscera. The appearances which were found at the post-mortem examination were as follows :— The upper and middle lobes of each lung were adherent to the walls of the chest; there was congestion, especially of the middle lobe, and patches of recent adherent lymph. Posterior parts of the upper lobes of both lungs were completely consolidated, and on section varied in colour from brick-red to greyish-white. The interlobular tissue was infiltrated with inflammatory products, which mapped out the tissue of the lung in small indurated areas, in which the tissue was granular-looking and friable. THE AUTHOR'S INVESTIGATION. 273 These appearances in the upper lobes were due to septic pleuro-pneumonia. They closely resembled, and were supposed to be due to, infectious pleuro-pneumonia. They were, however, found identical with the con- dition observed in septic pleuro-pneumonia in calves, and the disease was not conveyed by infection to other animals in the same stall. Scattered through the other lobes of both lungs were white, mostly firm, nodules raised above the level of the surface of the lung. They were surrounded by a zone of congestion, and in some cases sections were composed of indurated, in others of friable, lung tissue. In the posterior part of the right upper lobe there was a recent infarct. The bronchial glands at the roots of each lung were enlarged to two or three times their‘ natural size, and were firm and hardonsection. The parietal surface of the pericardium was covered with recent adherent lymph. The visceral surface of the pericardium was normal. Along the external surface of the aorta were chains of enlarged lymphatic glands connected by dilated lymphatic vessels. These glands were dark red or purplish in colour, from hemor- rhage into their substance. The heart was normal, and the endocardium not stained. There were chains of red glands on the cesophagus similar to those along the aorta. The appearance of the mesenteric glands was very striking. The mesentery, along the lymphatic vessels, was dotted with glands, varying in size from a large shot to a pea, which were deep red or prune-coloured. In addition, there were here and there enlarged glands without hemorrhage into their substance, and greyish in colour. There were scattered petechiz on the spleen. The kidneys were firm on section, and there was marked congestion in both, while it was more pronounced in one kidney than the other. The liver was congested, the congestion being more marked in patches. Sections from the consolidated upper lobes showed under the micro- scope thickening of the pleura and infiltration with round cells. The exudation filled the alveoli, and was breaking down in some cases in the centre. The vessels were injected, and there were hemorrhages into the alveoli. The periphery of the lobules was infiltrated with round cells. In sections of the kidney there was slight infiltration around glomeruli and arterioles with round cells; the epithelium in the convoluted tubules was granular and disintegrating ; there was hemorrhage in the straight tubules, and engorgement of vessels. In sections of liver the inter- and intra-lobular vessels were engorged ; there were interlobular collections of round cells displacing the liver cells, and the interlobular connective tissue was infiltrated with round cells; the liver cells were granular and cloudy. There can be no doubt from the symptoms and post-mortem appearances that this calf had been suffering from septicemia as the result of introducing the septic virus and crust subcutaneously in the groin. The two Wiltshire cows were killed, and there was nothing of importance to note in one, but in the other an incision into the udder revealed an enormous abscess, 18 274 INFECTIVE DISEASES. Though the naked-eye appearances of the kidney in this case were practically healthy, the results of examining sections of the kidney under the microscope were extremely instructive and interest- ing, as they showed that marked changes had taken place which were indicative of septic complication. The sections showed glomerulo-nephritis ; there was infiltration of the capsule of Bowman with round cells; there was infiltration also of the sheaths of the vessels with round cells, especially in the cortex. The blood-vessels in the boundary zone of the medulla were engorged, the arterioles of the glomeruli were also engorged, and there were slight hemorrhages into the capsule. The epithelium of the convoluted tubules was granular, opaque, and in some parts breaking down. Sections of the ulcers of the teats of these cows were also carefully examined, and the appearances corresponded exactly with the description given by Klein. On visiting the farms it was found that there were altogether about a hundred and sixty cows. Only a few had proved refractory, and had not taken the disease at all. The rest had contracted the disease in varying degrees of severity. About fifty at a time were dry, and they escaped until they were in milk again. The milk was drunk on the farms and in the village, and a quantity was supplied to a large town. Most careful inquiries were instituted to ascertain the existence of scarlatina among consumers of the milk, So far the research was completely analogous to the Hendon investigation ; but, in spite of the contamination of the milk, no cases of scarlatina were found either on the farms or in the village, and there was no epidemic in the town in which the milk was distributed. The disease, in fact, was cow-pox, and in no way connected with scarlet fever; and to assist others who may undertake a similar inquiry the details will now be given of the author's investigation into the nature of the outbreak in Wiltshire. THe Disease PROVED TO BE Cow-Pox. Locality of the Wiltshire Outbreak.—There is considerable interest attached to the fact that the farms were situated a few miles from Cricklade. They are close to the borders of Gloucestershire, and about twenty-five miles from Berkeley. They are, therefore, within that district in which in Jenner's time cow-pox was particularly prevalent. Time of Year.—The outbreak commenced about the end of September 1886, and lasted until about the middle of December. In an outbreak AN OUTBREAK OF COW-POX. 275 in 1885, a few miles from these farms, but on a separate estate, the disease appeared in June and July. Origin of the Outbreak.—The author made careful inquiries as to the origin of the outbreak, but beyond ascertaining with certainty that the disease appeared first at one farm, and was conveyed from this to the other farms, all evidence was negative. The milkers were unable to say whether it commenced in one particular cow or whether it broke out in several simultaneously. The only information which could be obtained, which was very suggestive, was that the milkers were in the habit of receiving their friends from neighbouring farms on Sundays. The friends would assist in the milking, to get the work done as quickly as possible on these occasions. As it was reported that the same disease had occurred that summer on a neighbouring farm, it is quite possible that it was introduced by one of the milkers’ friends. Mode of Dissemination.—When the disease made its first appearance, the bailiff, attributing it to the farm being, for some reason, unhealthy, decided to remove the cows to other farms. The herd was therefore divided and sent to two other farms. From these cows the disease was communicated to healthy cows, and, as this interchange was repeated, not only of the cows, but of the milkers, the disease was communicated to four separate farms. In all cases the disease was limited to the teats, and was conveyed from the teats of a diseased cow to the teats of a healthy cow by the hand of the milker. In no case was there any evidence of the disease being produced in healthy cows by other means than contact. Bulls and dry cows remained free from the disease, while the cows in milk, numbering about a hundred and twenty, were all attacked, with the exception of about a dozen, which proved to be entirely refractory. These facts explain how it is that the disease has been known from time immemorial as the “ cow-pox.” We never hear of cattle-pox or bull-pox. We have not, in other words, to deal with an infectious disease like cattle-plague or pleuro-pneumonia, but with a disease which is communicated solely by contact. The disease was only observed in the cows in milk, and was limited to the parts which come in contact with the hand of the milker. The virus was mechanically transferred from diseased to healthy cows, being communicated to all, or nearly all, the animals in the same shed, whether the milker had vesicles on his hand or not. Character of the Eruption on the Cow.—In a recent case which was carefully examined the teats were visibly inflamed, partly red and partly livid in colour. On each teat there were vesicles, some broken, and others which appeared to be just forming. In other cases there was nothing more than the remains of broken and dried vesicles, and more or less characteristic crusts on the teats. On visiting a byre at the time that the cows were brought in to be milked, it was a striking sight to look along the line and see one animal after another affected with the eruption ; and thus one character 276 INFECTIVE DISEASES. of the disease was clearly shown—the tendency to spread through a whole herd. On examining the eruption carefully, the degree of severity was found to differ very much in different animals. In a few cases the condition was most distressing, both to the cow and to the observer. In such cases the teats were encrusted with huge, dark brown or black crusts, which, when handled in milking, were broken and detached, exposing a bleeding, suppurating, ulcerated base. Such ulcers varied in size from a shilling to a florin, and in form were circular, ovoid, or irregular. Weeks afterwards, when the animals had recovered, the site of these ulcers was marked by irregular scars. All the milkers agreed as to the general characters of the malady, laying particular stress on the teats being red, swollen, and painful when handled. Vesicles would then appear on the teats—two, three, four, or more on each teat. They were soon broken in milking, and irritated into sores, which became covered with thick crusts. From four to six weeks elapsed before they had entirely healed. Other more observant milkers insisted that before the teats were red and swollen, spots or pimples first appeared which came to a head. This head increased if it was not broken, which might be the case if it was situated between the bases of the teats, until it formed a greyish vesicle of the size of a threepenny-piece or even larger. General Symptoms in the Cow.—As to the general condition of the cows nothing abnormal was observed. They appeared in the best of health, and in only one particular was any difference from their condition in health stated to exist. This was, that in the majority of the cases there could be no doubt that the milk had diminished. This might escape notice by inexperienced milkers in any particular animal, but the total amount of milk supplied by the herd was considerably below the average. History of the Eruption communicated to the Milkers.—The most striking characteristic of this outbreak was the communicability of the disease to the milkers. A milker, with vesicles which presented typically the characters of casual cow-pox, was taken to London and kept under observation. The various cases will be described in the order in which they first presented themselves, their history being given as much as possible in their own words. CasE I.—J.R., milker, informed the author that he was the first to catch the eruption from the cows. He stated that it came as a hard, painful spot, which formed “ matter” and then a “ big scab.” He had been inoculated about seven weeks previously. He pointed to the scar which remained on his right hand. This scar presented the characters of an irregular cicatrix, indicating considerable loss of substance. He stated that he had also two places on his back, where he supposes he had inoculated himself by scratching. He had continued milking ever since, but had had no fresh places. : Case II.—W. H., milker. He stated that he was inoculated from the cows about the same time as J. R. They were the two milkers of the herd in which the cow-pox first made its appearance. The eruption AN OUTBREAK OF COW-POX. 277 appeared in one place on each hand. He pointed to two irregular scars as the remains of the eruption. Case ITI.—J. L., milker, stated that he also caught the disease from the cows. On his right hand a spot appeared which formed a blister, then discharged matter and produced a bad sore. Lumps formed at the bend of his elbow and in his armpit. He lost his appetite, felt very poorly, and was obliged to leave off work for two or three days. Case IV.—W. K., « labourer on the farm, was put on as a milker to take the place of one of the others with bad hands. After his fifth or sixth milking—that is to say, about three days after first milking the cows, —pimples appeared on his hands, which became blistered and then ran on to bad sores. He pointed to three irregular scars on the first and third fingers and palm of the right hand. Lumps appeared in his elbow and in his armpit, but he did not feel very poorly in consequence. Case V.—J. F., milker, stated that about a month ago he noticed spots which appeared on both hands. His fingers swelled and were pain- ful. He said it came first like a pimple, and felt bard. Then it ‘ weeped out” water in four or five days. There were red marks creeping up to his arm. There was a sort of throbbing pain, and he could not sleep at night. On the right hand there was a scar, but on the left hand there was an ulcer about the size of a shilling covered with a thick black crust. The crust was partially detached, and exposed a granulating ulcer. It was in this stage the exact counterpart of the ulcers on the cow’s teats. Case VI.—W. H., junior, milker, stated that he had both hands bad about a month previously: first on the index finger of the left hand, and then on the right hand on his knuckle and between the first and second fingers. He said that it came up like a hard pimple, and the finger became swollen and red. After a few days it “weeped out” water, and then matter came away. Both his arms were swollen, but his left arm was the worst. About a fortnight after, he noticed kernels in his armpits, which were painful and kept him awake at night. His arms became worse, he could not raise them, and he had to give up milking. He also had had a “bad place” on the lower lip. On examina- tion, I found that the axillary glands were still enlarged and tender. He volunteered the statement that the places were just like the sore teats. Case VII.—J. H., the bailiff’s son, also milked the cows. He had a sore on the upper lid of his right eye and on his left hand. In both cases he had been previously scratched by a cat, and the scratches were inoculated from the cow’s teats. Theright hand also had been inoculated. The eruption broke out a fortnight previously. His hands were swollen, red, and hot. He felt very poorly and went to bed. Little spots like white blisters appeared on the back of his right hand. His mother remarked that they “rose up exactly as in vaccination.” Thick dark brown scabs formed. He was very ill for two or three days, but did not send for a doctor. He had painful lumps at the bend of his arm and in the armpit. He gave up milking, and had not taken to it since. On examining him, the thick crusts on his right hand were identical 278 INFECTIVE DISEASES. with the stage of scabbing in vaccinia. The scabs fell off in about three weeks to a month, and left permanent, depressed scars. Case VIII.—W. P., milker. This case was pointed out on the occasion of another visit, and is the only one in which the eruption was seen in its earlier stages. The history of this boy is as follows. He had taken the place of one of the other milkers who had vesicles on his fingers, and had been obliged to give up milking. After the seventh time of milking he noticed a small pimple on his right cheek. This became larger and vesicular. On examination it presented a depressed vesicle with a small central yellowish crust and a tumid margin, the whole being surrounded by a well-marked areola and considerable surrounding induration. On raising the central incrustation a crater-like excavation was seen, in which lymph welled up and trickled down the boy’s cheek. On the following day the crust had re-formed, and was studded with coagulated lymph. The areola became more marked, and on pricking the margin of the vesicle, the exuding contents were slightly turbid. From this day the surrounding infiltration increased enormously, the whole cheek was inflamed, and the eyelids so cedematous that the eye was almost closed. There was enlargement of the neighbouring lymphatic glands. The crust which had re-formed thickened day by day. It retained the character of central depression, and was situated on a reddened, raised, and indurated base (Plate VII.). From this date the surrounding induration gradually diminished. The crust changed in colour from dark brown to black, and finally fell off, leaving an irregular, depressed scar. This scar, when seen several months afterwards, was found to be a permanent disfigurement. The eruption appeared on the fourth day after exposure to infection, and allowing two days for incubation, the vesicle was at its height on the seventh or eighth day, and a typical tamarind-stone crust fell off on the twenty-first day after infection, leaving a depressed, irregular cicatrix. A vesicle also formed on the thumb of the left hand. Two days after the pimple appeared on his cheek, the lad said that he first noticed a pimple on his thumb, and this, on examination, presented a greyish flattened vesicle, about the size of a sixpence. Later, its vesicular character was much more marked, and a little central crust had com- menced to form. The margins became very tumid, giving it a marked appearance of central depression. The vesicle was punctured at its margin with a clean needle, and from the beads of lymph which exuded a number of capillary tubes were filled. Two days afterwards suppuration had commenced, the vesicle con- tained a turbid fluid, and the areola was well marked. Later, the crust had assumed a peculiar slate-coloured hue, and, on pressing it, pus welled up through a central fissure. The areola had increased, and there was considerable inflammatory thickening. The lymphatic glands in the armpit were enlarged and painful. Though there was deep ulceration, which left a permanent scar, the ulceration did not assume DESCRIPTION OF PLATE VII. Casual Cow-pox. Fic. 1—Case of W. P——, a milker, infected from the teats of a cow with natural cow-pox. There was a large depressed vesicle with a small central crust and a tumid margin, the whole being surrounded by a well-marked areola and considerable surrounding induration. Fig. 2.—The same case a week later, showing a reddish-brown crust on a reddened elevated and indurated base. Plate VIL. CASMAT YCOW PO. oo Vincent Brocka, Day & Son, Li AN OUTBREAK OF COW-POX. 279 quite so severe a character as in some of the other milkers. Possibly this may be accounted for to some extent by the fact that the pock was covered with a simple dressing instead of being subjected to the irritation and injury incidental to working on the farm. Revaccination of the Milkers.—There were in all eight milkers, varying in age from seventeen to fifty-five, who had vesicles on their hands from milking the cows. Seven had been vaccinated in infancy, but not since ; one had been revaccinated on entering the navy at fifteen. They were all revaccinated by a public vaccinator after complete recovery from the casual cow-pox (that is to say, from three to four months afterwards), and were all completely protected. On the other hand, two of the three milkers who had escaped infection from the casual cow-pox were also vaccinated, with the result in one of typical revaccination, in the other of very considerable local irritation. Retro-vaccination of Calves.—The result of retro-vaccinating calves with the humanised lymph was strictly in accordance with the experience of Ceely, who has pointed out that in retro-vaccination from the milker’s hands the results are doubtful, and depend greatly on the animals selected. “Those of a light colour and with thin skins were generally preferred, but often without avail, scarcely one-half of the operations succeeding.” “Vaccine lymph, in passing from the cow to man, undergoes « change which renders it less acceptable and less energetic on being returned to many individuals of the class producing it ; some refuse it altogether.” Two cases out of four succeeded, and an eruption was produced with all the typical characters of vaccinia, but running rather a rapid course, and the protection passing off after a few weeks, while the result obtained in calves inoculated with pus or scrapers from ulcers was in accordance with what is well known to occur if pus instead of lymph is taken for carrying on calf to calf vaccination. That the cow-pox in Wiltshire was identical with the so-called Hendon cow-disease there can be little room for doubt, for in both cases we find that— 1. The disease spread through a whole herd of milch cows. 2. The disease was characterised by the appearance of vesicles, which were broken by the hand of the milker, and irritated into deep ulcerations. 3. The disease was conveyed from one cow to another by the hand of the milker. 4, The vesicular eruption was communicable to the hand of the milker. 5. The disease was not fatal, and in cows which were killed and examined the post-mortem appearances could not be distinguished from accidental complications. 6. The naked-eye appearances and the duration of the ulcers of the teats were the same. 280 INFECTIVE DISEASES. 7. Sections of the ulcers showed under the microscope identical appearances of a cellular character, and the purulent discharge of the ulcers contained pyogenic cocci. 8, The results produced by inoculation of calves with the septic virus were identical. If we examine the chain of argument which has been brought forward to maintain the existence of cow-scarlatina at Hendon, we find that it was urged :— 1. That the Hendon cow disease was a disease in which the post-mortem appearances resembled scarlatina, 2. That this disease was associated with a streptococcus, which produced, by inoculation in calves, a disease with post-mortem appearances similar to those of the Hendon cows. 3. That a streptococcus regarded as identical with the one above mentioned was found in certain cases of scarlatina in man, which when inoculated in calves produced post-mortem appearances similar to the post-mortem appearances in the original Hendon cows and in certain cases of scarlatina in man. But the microscopical appearances of the kidney of a Wiltshire cow were identical with those which were regarded as indicating scarlatina in a Hendon cow; and, indeed, the statements as to the post-mortem appearances in the Hendon cows, when studied, not only do not necessarily indicate scarlatina, but they cannot even be considered of primary importance, or as throwing much light on the question of scarlatina at all. The description of the naked-eye appearances in both cows only suggests coincident pleurisy or pleurisy with pneumonia. The microscopical appearances in both were suggestive of septic complication. A careful examination of the post-mortem appearances of calves inoculated with scraping of an ulcer of a Hendon cow, or with cultivations of the streptococcus from certain cases of scarlatina, brings to light much more striking changes. These appearances, however, cannot be regarded as indicative of scarlatina. They are in reality the post-mortem appearances of septic poisoning, and oceur commonly in many diseases. This is clearly shown by com- paring the post-mortem appearances in the calf which was killed while suffering from septicemia as the result of inoculation from the ulcers of a Wiltshire cow. These visceral changes are not to be distinguished from the post-mortem appearances described in the calves inoculated by Klein. Consequently, that the strepto- AN OUTBREAK OF COW-POX. 281 coccus found in certain cases of scarlet fever should produce on inoculation in calves certain post-mortem appearances which are found in many diseases, and should fail to produce fever, ulceration of the tonsils, or scarlatinal rash, or any condition in the least resembling, clinically, the disease in man, and yet that the result should be regarded as scarlatina in the calf, is a conclusion quite untenable. It is true that visceral lesions similar in character were produced in calves whether inoculated with scrapings or with streptococci from ulcers of the Hendon cows or with streptococci from certain cases of scarlet fever. In both cases the streptococcus is pathogenic, and inceulation of Streptococcus pyogenes or the inoculation of septic virus, is liable to produce septicemia. These facts constitute a mass of evidence which justifies the conviction that the pathological data which appeared to support the theory that the vesicular disease of the teats of cows at Hendon was scarlatina in the cow, admit of an entirely different interpretation, and there can be no longer any doubt that the milk was not infected by the cows but with the virus of scarlet fever from some human source which Mr. Power failed to discover. All the other evidence reported to the Board of Agriculture pointed to the same conclusion. The disease at Hendon was admittedly introduced from Derbyshire; and from Professor Axe’s report it appears that only a part of the herd was sold to the farmer at Hendon; other cows with the same eruption were transferred to other dairy farms, and the disease communicated to healthy cows as at Hendon, but in no instance did scarlet fever occur among the consumers of the milk. At the farm of the brother of the dealer the disease was communicated to three of the milkers, and the eruption diagnosed by Dr. Bates as vaccinia. All this evidence must be regarded as conclusive. The con- tamination of the milk at Hendon with scarlet fever must neces- sarily have been a mere coincidence; and the conclusion that the milk could not possibly have become infected from any human source is untenable. Professor Axe even ascertained that scarlet fever existed at Hendon during several months of 1885, and that the dwellings where cases occurred stood within six hundred yards of the cowsheds which contained the incriminated cows, and that out of fourteen men on the farm six lived in a district where cases occurred. Professor Axe has also stated that the father and brother of a girl with scarlet fever, visited the dairy during her illness. Whether any of those engaged on the 282 INFECTIVE DISEASES. farm suffered from latent scarlet fever does not appear to have been ascertained. There is, it is true, no evidence to show that any one daily carried infection to the milk, but the exact path of infection is not always easy to trace; and because it was not actually traced it was hardly reasonable to assume that the possibility of contamination from a human source could be altogether eliminated. In attempting to communicate scarlet fever to cows Professor M‘Fadyean confirmed the negative results which had been experi- enced in some earlier experiments by Klein In 1882 Klein inoculated and fed cows and yearling heifers with diseased products from human patients, using desquamated cuticle and the discharges from the throat; but the experiments all failed. M‘Fadyean’s failures were still more marked. Cows and calves were inoculated’ with blood from scarlet fever patients, and they were made to drink water thickened with desquamated cuticle, but all the experiments proved unsuccessful. The author believes that the outbreak at Hendon was one of cow-pox, which was prevalent in this country in 1886. The outbreak in Wiltshire could not be distinguished bacteriologically or clinically or in its micropathology, from the disease at Hendon, and the Wiltshire outbreak proved on investigation to be true cow- pox. This conclusion was questioned at the time, as cow-pox was generally believed to be extinct in England; but that view is entirely fallacious, and the author’s conclusions have since been fully confirmed by independent observers, whose work will be referred to in another chapter (p. 321). Stamping-out System.—The Notification Act of 1890 may he voluntarily adopted in sanitary districts, but it would be a great advantage if notification were carried out uniformly all over the country, Prompt information may lead to detecting the origin of cases of scarlet fever, and isolation and disinfection will assist in pre- venting its spread. Epidemics have occurred on a large scale owing to scarlet fever existing among those engaged in dairy work, and the precaution not being taken of stopping the milk supplied to the consumers. Scarlet fever cannot be so readily controlled as small- pox, for it may be spread by mild cases before the nature of the disease is suspected, and small-pox cannot be conveyed in milk. MEASLES. 283 MBEASLEs. Measles is a contagious disease peculiar to man. It lasts for one or two weeks, and produces fever, catarrh of the respiratory mucous membrane, anda characteristicrash. It is highly contagious, especially before the nature of the disease is revealed; there is consequently great difficulty in preventing its spread in schools and households. The contagium appears to be given off from the body, principally if not entirely, by the breath. One attack is pro- tective against future attacks. “The whole population of « country may acquire a certain degree of immunity. Measles introduced into countries where it was previously unknown assumes a most malig- nant form. There are no characteristic post-mortem appearances. Bacteria in Measles.—Micrococci have been found in the blood, catarrhal exudation, and skin, by Keating, Babes, and others, but they are accidental epiphytes of no importance, or associated with secondary complications, as in scarlet fever. Canon and Pielicke have found in the blood small bacilli varying in form. They do not grow on nutrient agar or blood serum, but cultures were obtained by pricking the finger of a patient suffering from measles, and allowing the blood to drop into sterilised broth. After a few days the broth became cloudy, and later, a floceulent deposit formed. The bacilli were also obtained from the nasal and conjunctival secretions. The nature of the contagium of measles is unknown. Stamping-out System.— Measles is not easily controlled by the stamping-out system ; it is, in fact, extremely difficult, almost impos- sible, to prevent its spread, as it is especially infectious during the period of incubation. Notification, isolation, and disinfection assist in controlling an epidemic, but the value of the system does not apply to thesame extent in measles as in other infectious diseases. CHAPTER XX. SMALL-POX.—CATTLE PLAGUE. SMALL-POX. SMALL-POx is an infectious and inoculable disease of man, charac- terised by sudden and severe fever, followed in forty-eight hours by a characteristic papular eruption which gradually becomes vesicular and then pustular. The virus is contained in the vesicles, and in a concentrated form in mature pustules. It also passes into the air from the breath and skin. Infection may occur from the dead body, and clothes and bedding may retain the contagium for months. One attack, as a rule, gives immunity against future attacks. Small-pox is undoubtedly a disease foreign to this country. Its home is in the East. Some of the old writers held that it spread to Europe from Alexandria about the year 640 a.p., following in the wake of the Arab conquests in Egypt, Palestine, Persia, along the Asiatic coast, through Lycia, Gallicia, along the coast of Africa, and across the Mediterranean to Spain ; others maintained that it was not introduced until the end of the eleventh or beginning of the twelfth century, by the returning Crusaders. At any rate, small- pox was imported from the East, and probably from Egypt. Hero- dotus, who visited Egypt, leads us to infer that epidemics were unknown there during the rule of the Pharaohs; but Egypt undoubtedly became a hotbed of pestilence during the Mohammedan occupation. Prosper Alpinus imagined that both the plague and the small-pox were concocted in the putrid waters of the Nile, but he would probably have been more correct if he had suggested that they arose from the insanitary condition of the Arab conquerors and their filthy camp followers, who did their best to destroy all that remained of that magnificent civilisation which had existed in the days of the ancient Egyptians. We do not know the exact period at which small-pox was first imported into England, and the records of the disease are very meagre until the sixteenth century. 284 SMALL-POX. 285 In 1593 Simon Kellwaye appended to his work on the Plague a short treatise on the small-pox. ‘ Oftentimes,” he wrote, “those that are infected with the plague are in the end of the disease sometimes troubled with the small pocks or measels, as also by good observation it hath been seen that theyare fore-runners or warnings of the plague to come.” According to Kellwaye the disease arose from the “excrements of all the foul humours in our bodies, which striving with the purest doth cause a supernatural heat and ebullition of our blood, always beginning with a feaver in the most part.” Small-pox steadily increased in the seventeenth century until it was a formidable scourge, for no advantage was taken of all the experi- ence which had been gained in dealing with the plague. No public measures were adopted to cope with the disease, and the people came to regard the new pestilence as a visitation which was unavoidable. Early in the eighteenth century, small-pox inoculation was introduced, and this was superseded in the nineteenth century by vaccination. Examination of small-pox cases after death does not reveal any characteristic lesions in the internal organs, but sections of small- pox vesicles show an important structure. A vesicle is formed by the exudation raising up the outer layer of epidermis, and the chief feature is the formation of a vacuolated structure in which, especially in the later stages, bacteria are found in abundance. Bacteria in Small-pox.—Cohn and Weigert found cocci in variolous lymph. Hlava found Streptococcus pyogenes in the pustules, and Garré streptococci in the internal organs in a case of variola hemorrhagica. In a fatal case of variola complicated with pemphigus Garré found a streptococcus in the pemphigus vesicles. Klein and Copeman have found a small bacillus which they regard as characteristic, but its biological characters are unknown, as it will not grow on any nutrient media. The bacteria commonly found in variolous pus are the usual pyogenic organisms. The nature of the contagium of small-pox is unknown. Protective Inoculation.—Experience had taught that a person was not, as a rule, attacked with small-pox a second time; but when and how the method of artificially inducing a mild form of the disease was discovered, or when this preventive treatment was first employed, is unknown. Avicenna of Bokhara was credited with the discovery, and it was supposed that the practice was carried by Tartar and Chinese traders to Surat, Bengal, and China, and by the Mahommedan pilgrims to Mecca. In Constantinople it was supposed by some to have been introduced from the Morea by an old woman, and by others by the women of Circassia. The 286 INFECTIVE DISEASES. Circassian women fastened three needles together, and pricked the skin over the pit of the stomach and heart, the navel, the right wrist, and the left ankle. The variolous matter was applied to the bleeding points, and the eruption came out in five or six days. In Constantinople scarifications were made on the forehead, wrists, and legs, and carefully selected virus applied to the incisions. The needle used was a three-edged surgeon’s needle, or the operation was performed with a lancet. The virus was obtained by pricking the vesicles, and pressing out the matter into a clean glass vessel. The Armenians preferred to be inoculated in both thighs. In Barbary a slight wound was made between the thumb and forefinger, and the virus obtained from a mild form of small-pox. In Hindustan the operation was performed at certain seasons of the year, and a preparatory regimen enforced. The inoculators were very careful in the selection of the virus, as they had learnt its varying intensity, and they were credited with being able to control the amount of the eruption. They preferred to inoculate the outside of the arm, midway between the wrist and the elbow in males, and between the elbow and the shoulder in females. The skin over the part to be inoculated was first well rubbed with a piece of cloth; then, with slight touches of a small instrument, little wounds were made over an area which might be covered by a small coin, and sufficient to cause just an appearance of blood. A pledget of cotton-wool charged with the variolous matter, and moistened with water, was applied to the wound. This virus was obtained from inoculated pustules of the preceding year. In China the contents of the variolous pustules were dried and kept for several years. If the virus was to be used from fresh pustules the “acrimony” of the matter was corrected by steaming. The dried powder was made into a paste, which was wrapped up in cotton-wool and introduced into the nostril. The Greeks were more cautious in their procedure, and were said to inoculate tens of thousands without an accident. They operated only upon those in perfect health, punctures were made with needles, and the virus was used in the crude state, freshly obtained from the “kindly” pustules of a young child. They were particularly careful in the choice of the ‘“ ferment.” Dr. Perrot Williams, in 1722, wrote that the practice of com- municating small-pox had long been employed in South Wales. The oldest inhabitants said that it had been a common practice with them “time out of mind,” but Lady Mary Wortley Montagu was responsible for the general adoption of small-pox inoculation in SMALL-POX. 287 England by persuading physicians in London to employ it. Lady Mary had her child inoculated in Turkey. An old Greek woman inocu- lated one arm, and Mr. Maitland, surgeon to the Embassy, the other. The disease ensued in due course with an eruption of a hundred pustules. This was the first time that the Byzantine method of inoculation was performed upon an English subject. In 1721 Dr. Harris delivered a lecture before the College of Physicians, and described the successful inoculation of four children of the French consul at Aleppo, by means of a thread imbued with variolous pus. A daughter of Lady Mary was inoculated in England by Maitland in 1721, and subsequently a number of criminals were inoculated by him. Incisions were made through the cutis, and pledgets which had been steeped in variolous pus from ripe pustules, were applied to the wound. This was known as Maitland’s or the reformed operation, but it was soon modified, as troublesome ulcers resulted. Shortly afterwards Maitland encountered another obstacle. The child of a Mr. Batt was inoculated, had plenty of pustules, and soon recovered, but six of Mr. Batt’s domestic servants, ‘who all in turn were wont to hug this child while under this operation, and whilst the pustules were out, never suspecting them to be infectious, were all seized at once with the right natural small-pox of several and very different kinds.” Dr. Jurin in 1729 reverted to the Eastern method, and recom- mended virus from a mild case of small-pox, but the virus was still taken from perfectly maturated pustules, and the operation continued to be followed by bad results. In order to diminish the risks, Burgess in 1766 advocated certain improvements. An incision about an inch long was made on each arm through the cuticle, but not so deep as to wound the c2llular tissue. A variolous thread was laid along the whole length of the wound and fixed with plaster. Ulcerations and other accidents continued to take place, and a new epoch in the history of inoculation was the introduction of the Suttonian method, in 1764-6. It was said that Mr. Sutton, with his assistants, inoculated one hundred thousand persons. The method was kept secret at first, but the essential points were all discovered and published by Dr. Dimsdale, Dimsdale recommended a very slight puncture with a lancet wet with variolous matter. Subsequently, Sutton published an account of his method, and the result of his operation may be given in his own words. “The lancet being charged with the smallest perceivable quantity (and the smaller the better) of unripe, crude, or watery matter, immediately 288 INFECTIVE DISEASES. introduce it by puncture, obliquely, between the scarf and true skin, barely sufficient to draw blood, and not deeper than the sixteenth part of an inch. Neither patting, nor daubing of the matter, in or over the punctured part, is at all necessary to its efficacy. This practice, indeed, is rather prejudicial than otherwise, as it may affect the form of the incision, and thus be apt to confound our judgment upon it. “ Indications of the Incision—In the incipient state of variolous increase in the incision, a small florid spot appears on the part of access, resembling a flea-bite in size; and on passing the finger lightly over it a hardness is felt not larger than a small pin’s head. This florid appearance and hardness denote that the variolous principle is effectually imbibed, and their indications point no farther, unless the progress to vesication be very slow, in which case an uncomfortable number of pustules may be expected to follow. The florid spot in most instances of inoculation is somewhat larger, or more extended on the second, than on the third day after the insertion. “About the fourth day from inoculation, should the incision begin to vesicate, an itching sensation will be complained of on the place of insertion—the occurrence of which symptom is the first indication of a favourable event, yet not of sufficient importance to justify any present relaxation in the preparatory proceedings. “ The vesication of the incision in most instances will begin to be visible on the fourth or fifth day after the insertion of the matter ; the sooner it becomes so, the more favourable may be expected to be the event. The extent or diameter of the vesication at this stage does not usually exceed that of a large pin’s head, and it has invariably a dint or small depression.” Adams obtained still more striking results by inoculating with variolous lymph from pear]-pox, a mild variety of small-pox. Starting with lymph obtained from this benign form of small-pox, and selecting the cases, and carrying on arm to arm variolation, the results obtained were practically identical with the phenomena obtained by inoculation of the arm with cow-pox lymph. Similar results were obtained by Guillou, but more rapidly. In 1827 there was an epidemic of variola, and Guillou, having no vaccine virus, took variolous lymph from a girl fifteen years of age on the fifth day of the eruption. The case was one of varioloid or mild small-pox, attri- buted to previous vaccination. The variolous lymph was inserted in ten places on the arm of a healthy infant still at the breast. This inoculation produced ten beautiful “vaccine” vesicles, from which, on the ninth day, forty-two infants were inoculated under the eyes of two of the local authorities. These furnished virus for the inoculation of one hundred, who were inoculated in the presence of magistrates and many medical men. This experiment was repeated with success. Variolous lymph was taken from two lads at school, and in ten SMALL-POX, 289 cases produced appearances with a perfect similarity to ordinary vaccination, : Thiele produced a benign vesicle in the following manner. Variolous lymph was diluted with warm cow’s milk, and inoculated like ordinary vaccine lymph. Large vesicles resulted. There were _ febrile symptoms from the third to the fourth day, and a secondary onset of fever much more pronounced between the eleventh and fourteenth days. The areola was strongly marked, and not con- fined to the inoculated place, which was occasionally surrounded by minute secondary vesicles. After watching through ten removes, the vesicles finally assumed the characters of an ordinary vaccination with cow-pox lymph. As soon as the secondary fever ceased to occur inoculation was practised from arm to arm without diluting the lymph with cow’s milk. The lymph was designated lacto-varioline, and the result was variolation in its mildest form. The result of variolating the cow will be discussed in another chapter. Small-pox inoculation, or variolation, protected the individual when genuine small-pox was produced, and ,endangered the com- munity. Persons inoculated became centres of infection, and con- veyed the disease to others. Haygarth, although in favour of inoculation, strongly condemned its use without precautions to prevent the spread of the disease. ‘The most serious and solid objection,” he wrote, ‘“‘ that has been advanced against inoculation is deduced from a comparison of the Bills of Mortality for a series of years in various places. They show that a larger proportion of inhabitants have died of the small-pox in towns where it is prac- tised than in the same before it was known, or in others where it is prohibited.” Even Dr. Dimsdale, an ardent inoculator, admitted that more lives were lost in London than before inoculation commenced, and the practice was more detrimental than beneficial to society; and he added: ‘The disease by general inoculation throughout London spreads by visitors, strangers, servants, washerwomen, doctors, and inoculators, by means of hackney coaches in which the sick are sent out to take the air, or by sound persons approaching them in the streets. The poor in London are miserably lodged ; their habitations are in close alleys, courts, lanes, and old dirty houses ; they are often in want of necessaries, even of bedding. The fathers and mothers are employed constantly in laborious occupation abroad, and cannot attend the inoculated sick.” In 1798 Jenner, who had practised small-pox inoculation, proposed the use of a benign non-infectious lymph obtained from a disease of the cow or horse as a substitute 19 290 INFECTIVE DISEASES, for variolous lymph, and in 1840 small-pox inoculation was prohibited by Act of Parliament. Stamping-out System.—The disappointing and dangerous results of small-pox inoculation led to a widespread demand for some new method for dealing with small-pox. This induced Haygarth to turn his attention to the subject, and towards the end of the eighteenth century to bring before the medical profession and the public a plan for stamping out the disease. Haygarth, who was a close observer and an able physician, studied the question of the communicability of the disease from one person to another, and its conveyance by infected clothing and other means, and ultimately drew up rules and regulations for its prevention, the importance of which we are only now beginning to fully acknowledge. Haygarth’s essential doctrine was “ that mankind was not necessarily subject to the small-pox, and that it was always caught by infection from a patient or the poisonous matter,” and might be avoided by observing his Rules of Prevention. These rules comprised a regular system of notification and isolation. Inspectors were to be provided to report cases of small-pox, and people were to be rewarded for carrying out the instructions. Several examples were given of the results at Chester, where the plan was adopted. Haygarth met with considerable encouragement from some of the leaders of the profession. Dr. Fothergill wrote to him in 1778, saying, “T have mentioned the intention of freeing this country from the small-pox to divers of the faculty, and shall continue to do so as it falls in my way. The proposal is variously received, but in exact proportion to their humanity.” In 1793 Haygarth made considerable addition to his rules, and urged that legislation should follow to make them compulsory. Provision was to be made to reward the poor for observing the rules, and public thanks to the wealthy for their support were to be published in the parish church and newspapers. Transgression of the rules was to be punished by a fine of from £10 to £50, one half to go to the informer and the other half to the fund which supplied the expense of rewards to the poor, and all details were to be supplied to the press. It was further suggested that Great Britain should be divided into districts, including a certain number of parishes or townships, and that to each of them a surgeon or apothecary should be appointed as inspector to see that the regulations were exactly observed. In addition, there were to be directors of inspectors, superin- tended by a commission of Physicians in London and in Edinburgh. All salaries were to be paid by the county rates, and the rewards for observing the rules of prevention were to be guaranteed out of the parish funds. On the requisition of the director and inspector of a circuit, power was to be given to two or more justices of the peace to appoint a separate house for the reception of patients with the small-pox. In conclusion, SMALL-POX, 291 Haygarth maintained that the plague had been completely exterminated from this country, for above a century, by civil regulations, and that there seemed to be little doubt that the small-pox was propagated on principles similar to the plague, and that it also might certainly be exterminated from this island. Haygarth’s teachings had a profound influence upon both the profession and the educated public, but his system of compulsory notification was never carried out, for no legislation followed to enforce his recommenda- tions. This is a matter deeply to be regretted, for towards the end of the eighteenth century small-pox was declining in London, general sanitation was making rapid advances, small-pox inoculation, which created fresh centres of infection, was falling into disfavour, small-pox hospitals were built, which served to limit centres of infection, and the profession and the public were influenced by the teaching of Haygarth with regard to the various ways of avoiding the spread of the disease. It only required the compulsory adoption of Haygarth’s system uniformly all over the country to have kept the disease in control, if not to have entirely extirpated it from Great Britain. That a similar conviction existed at the time is evidenced by an article which appeared in 1779 inthe Medical and Chirurgical Review, in which the following statements were made :— ‘Plans for the extirpation of the small-pox have been suggested. . . « To do this, however, the exertions of the physician are incompetent unless they be aided by the powerful hand of Governments, but this has hitherto been withheld. The grand means, however, of extirpating this destructive malady is an early and strict separation of the infected from those that are sound.” Small-pox in the present century has been largely controlled by legislation, especially in recent years, by the Public Health Acts for England and Wales, for Scotland, and for Ireland; the Epidemic and other Diseases Prevention Act ; the Public Health Amendment Act ; the Labouring Classes’ Dwellings Acts ; the Housing of the Working Classes Act ; the Public Health (Ships) Act; the Local Government Board Act-—and various orders and memoranda of the Local Govern- ment Board ; the Infectious Diseases Notification Act ; the Infectious Diseases Prevention Act ; and the Public Health (London) Act. By the Public Health Act of 1875 England was divided into Urban and Rural Sanitary Districts, and powers were given to ‘enforce regulations of the Local Government Board for guarding against the spreading of infectious diseases; to provide medical aid and accommodation for infected persons, to promote cleansing, ventilation, and disinfection, to provide hospitals, to provide for 292 INFECTIVE DISEASES. destruction or disinfection of infected bedding, clothing, and other articles, and to appoint Medical Officers of Health. As to the value of notification and isolation in cities such as Tiondon we have the evidence of the Metropolitan Asylums Board. In their Report for 1889 we read in reference to the diminution ot small-pox : “These very satisfactory results confirm the view taken by the Committee two years ago to the effect that the rapid and systematic removal from crowded districts of infected persons, each of whom might have become a centre of contagion, is an important factor in stamping out small-pox from the metropolitan population. The notification of cases will also greatly facilitate the action of the managers in this direction.” More recently there has been a most striking confirmation of these statements. An outbreak of small-pox occurred in Maryle- bone, and by the energy of the officials of the Board this outbreak was suppressed in a few days by means of notification and immediate isolation. The Isolation Hospitals Act of 1893 gives power to County Councils to provide, or cause to be provided, an isolation hospital in any district within their county. An application to a County Council for the establishment of an isolation hospital may be made by any one or more of the authorities defined as local authorities having jurisdiction in the county or any part of the county. Further, the County Council may direct an inquiry to be made by two medical officers of health in the county as to the necessity of an isolation hospital being established for the use of the inhabitants of any particular district in the county, and in the event of such medical officers reporting that such a hospital ought to be established for the use of the inhabitants of a district, may take the same proceedings in all respects for the establishment of such hospital, as if a petition had been presented by a local authority for the establishment of an isolation hospital for the district named in the report of such medical officers of health. Lastly, the Local Government Act of 1894 provides for the formation of District Councils; and the powers, duties, and habilities are principally those which were conferred by the Public Health Act of 1875, In the opinion of the author the Government of this country should enter into friendly negotiations with the Governments of other countries, so that there, might be concerted action to prevent an avoidable disease like small-pox. Much good might result from the formation of a permanent International Board of Health. If civilisation is not yet CATTLE PLAGUE. 293 sufficiently advanced to admit of a system of international notification, our Consular authorities should be instructed to give immediate notifica tion of the existence of small-pox in other countries, and every measure should be enforced to diminish the possibilities of importation. The duties of a Central Health Office, presided over by a Minister of Healtb, should include the collection of information as to the existence of small- pox in other countries, and details should be published in the Annual Reports of the Department. Regulations, for example, for dealing with the importation of rags from small-pox stricken places should be enforced, as in the case of cholera ; and if, in spite of these precautions, isolated cases occurred in this country, they should be dealt with promptly. Notification should be enforced uniformly all over the country, and there is not the slightest reason why the authorities and the public should not immediately receive information of the existence of small-pox, whilst to procure immediate isolation we have only to imitate the excellent ambulance system of the Metropolitan Asylums Board. To procure prompt notification there must be no loophole for evading the Act, and there should be a heavy penalty for failure to notify not only small-pox, but any case which may reasonably be supposed to be one of small-pox. The police should be required to report any case of small-pox in common lodging-houses or shelters ; they should have power to require any tramp suffering from small-pox, or from any disease which may reasonably be supposed to be small-pox, to be examined by the medical officer of the Union, and kept under observation, or transferred at once to the isolation hospital ; and inmates of the workhouse should be daily inspected, and no case allowed to leave when there is the least suspicion of small-pox infection. Objections no doubt will be raised to this proposal, but the frequency with which small-pox is spread by tramps fully justifies these measures. All these measures should be carried out as 4 matter of routine, and without the semblance of panic. Isolation should be uniformly enforced all over the country, and vaccination should be relegated to the position of a voluntary auxiliary measure, which should never be allowed to take the place of sanitary regulations to stamp out the disease. CarrLe PLaGuE. Cattle plague is a highly contagious disease of bovines producing high fever, and characterised by an eruption with a resemblance to human small-pox. The disease is transmissible to other ruminants, and is inoculable in man. One attack gives immunity against future attacks. Cattle plague and small-pox are not intercom- municable, and are specifically distinct diseases, but the resemblance between them was recognised from early times. Ramazzini published an account of the cattle pest in Italy in 1711, and described the pustules which broke out over the body as similar to those of variola in 294 INFECTIVE DISEASES. kind and appearance. Dr, Layard, in 1780, described this disease of horned cattle as an eruptive fever of the variolous kind, with the appearance and stages of small-pox. This resemblance was endorsed by Murchison, one of the Commissioners appointed in 1866 to inquire into the origin and nature of cattle plague. Murchison pointed out that in both diseases the eruption con- sisted of pustules and scabs, and that in both it extended from the skin to the interior of the mouth and nostrils; in both, the pustules and scabs were preceded or accompanied by patches of roseola ; in both, they were occasionally interspersed with petechie ; and in both, they sometimes left behind pitted scars and discolora- tions on the cutis. The other prominent symptoms of rinderpest were also those of small-pox—viz., pyrexia, lumbar pain, salivation, and running from the nostrils, alvine flux, albuminuria, hematuria, and “the typhoid state.” The anatomical lesions of the internal organs in rinderpest and unmodified small-pox were identical—viz., congestion or inflammation of the mucous membranes of the air passages and digestive canal, patches of ecchymosis and even gangrene of the stomach and other mucous surfaces, and darkly coloured blood. In both rinderpest and small-pox the duration of the pyrexial stage was on an average about eight days. In both diseases a peculiarly offensive odour was exhaled from the body before and after death. The two diseases resembled one another in their extreme contagiousness, and in the facility, with which the poison was transmitted by fomites. Both diseases were easily propagated by inoculation, and in both cases the inoculated disease was milder and less fatal than that resulting from infection. In both diseases there was a period of incubation, which is shorter when the poison has been introduced by inoculation than when it has been received by infection. Ceely described the result of an accidental inoculation of cattle- plague virus in the human subject. A vesicle was produced which so closely corresponded with the result of inoculated cow-pox that Ceely inclined to the belief that cattle plague was a malignant form of cow-pox. The following is the account of this case as reported by Ceely. Mr, Hancock, a veterinary inspector at Uxbridge, was engaged in superintending the autopsy of a bullock recently dead of cattle plague. His assistant, who was performing the operation, while occupied in removing the skin from the scrotum, accidentally punctured the back of Mr. Hancock’s hand with the point of the knife. The puncture being slight was disregarded at the time, but was washed as soon ag practicable, and thonght of no more. Five . CATTLE PLAGUE. 295 days afterwards, a small, slightly elevated, hard pimple was felt and seen on the site of the puncture. This gradually advanced till the ninth day of the puncture, the fourth from papulation, when the enlargement became distinctly vesicular, At that time there were but slight constitutional symptoms. On the next day, the tenth from the receipt of the puncture, the fifth from papulation, and the second from vesiculation, Mr. Hancock consulted Mr. Rayner, of Uxbridge, who, on seeing the hand, inquired if the patient had been handling the udder of a cow, as he theught he could recognise a cow-pox vesicle of the ninth day. The vesicle was distended with thin lymph, its margin elevated and slightly brown, its centre depressed and brownish, and the whole surrounded with a large bright red areola. There was then considerable tumefaction extend- ing from the knuckles to above the wrist. The absorbent vessels were considerably inflamed, and, like the axillary glands, were tender and painful; the pulse, naturally slow, was accelerated; there was much pain in the back and limbs, severe distracting headache, etc. ; all of which symptoms continued to increase during the two following days. At the end of that time the diffused areola had extended as far asthe elbow. Fifteen days after the puncture, and ten days after papulation, the local inflammation and constitutional symptoms had partially subsided. The vesicle contained a rather turbid brownish fluid, and there were present all the indications of a declining vaccine vesicle. Murchison also saw and described the case, and gave practically the same account of it. He pointed out that the appearances and the entire history were very different from the results of a poisoned wound, but coincided with the appearances seen after vaccination. In 1832 Macpherson, in Bengal, inoculated eleven native children with cattle-plague crusts. There was no result in six, others suffered from local inflammation, and in one a vesicle formed. With lymph from this vesicle other children were inoculated. The results in all were similar in appearance to those of vaccination. Two children were subsequently inoculated with human variola, and were said to be protected. In i834 Macpherson’s example was followed by Mr. Furrell in Assam. Furnell inoculated four children with cattle-plague crusts without result, but his assistant succeeded with crusts taken from the back and abdomen of the diseased cattle, and carried on the lymph from child to child. In one case there was a general eruption. Furnell inoculated his own child from one of the native children : a copious eruption followed, and the child died. Furnell 296 INFECTIVE DISEASES. after this misfortune issued a strong warning against taking the virus from the cow. The experiments were made in the belief that cattle plague was really small-pox in cattle, and that the virus would protect against human variola. Similar results were obtained by Mr. Wood at. Gowalpara in 1838. Bacteria in Cattle Plague.—Semner cultivated streptococci from the blood and lymphatic glands of a sheep suffering from cattle plague. A calf inoculated with a cultivation died in seven days. The cocci were stated to lose their virulence by cultivation, and the weakened cultivation to protect against the virulent disease. The micro-organism was very probably Streptococcus pyogenes, and the calf may have died of septic infection. There can be no doubt that the nature of the contagium of cattle plague is unknown. Protective Inoculation.—In the great epidemic of cattle plague in England in 1866, owing to a belief that the analogy between cattle plague and small-pox was closer than it really is, vaccination with cow-pox was attempted as a preventive measure, but was proved to be absolutely useless. Stamping-out System.—When cattle plague was imported in 1865 into London, dairymen and stock-owners made no attempts to prevent the extension of the disease, so that it spread rapidly all over the country through disposal of infected cattle. The losses were enormous, and an Order in Council was passed in July 1865, directing dairymen and others to notify outbreaks of any contagious: or infectious disease among the animals under their charge. “1 } Bacillus anthracis, but smaller Riouee acne) in size. These bacilli developed into long leptothrix filaments, and formed spores. It was further asserted that on inoculation, cultures produced lesions indicative of swine fever; the bacilli were also pathogenic in mice and rabbits. . = Later this bacillus was re- , een \ 4 nounced in favour of another. = | pe’ <= In the following year Det- \ \ Ze mers described a bacillus, but \ J AEN ,. & subsequently renounced it in x : favour of a micrococcus. aa ¥ ‘ fap | In 1882 Pasteur maintained eS ] S23 al that the virus of swine fever in os France (rouget) was a dumb-bell Fic. 139.—Bacmtus No. 2. From a micrococcus, which produced the PREPARATION OF BRONCHIAL Mucus same effect in pigeons as the or A Pic. (KuxErn.) pig : microbe of fowl-cholera. Though rouget or swine measles is probably a different disease, the occurrence of this micro-organism is of interest in this connection. In 1883 Klein again investigated swine fever, and discovered Bacillus No. 2, and maintained that these bacilli were found in the blood, in the peritoneal and bronchial exudations ; and in the air vesicles of the lungs, in the form of leptothrix filaments ten Fre. 140.—Bacititus No. 2. From an or twenty times the length of Lamm: Cumin (cai) single rods. Cultivations were made on solid media. The organisms in these cultures were minute rods actively motile, occurring singly or forming chains, two or three 350 INFECTIVE DISEASES. times as long as Bacterium termo; and in preparations made from diseased organs they were found to possess a very narrow trans- parent halo, a sort of hyaline gelatinous capsule, Inoculation of cultures failed to produce the lesions found in animals naturally infected. Two pigs were inoculated, one with a sub-culture from the swollen bronchial gland of a pig that had died of pig-typhoid, and a second with a culture obtained from the spleen of a mouse that had been inoculated from another case of swine fever. After two days the inguinal glands near the seat of inoculation became swollen, and the temperature rose slightly, After three or four weeks the ion recovered. Mice on the fifth or sixth day after inoculation showed symptoms of illness, then respiration became superficial and slow. Death occurred on the sixth or seventh ay day. Rabbits showed a rise of temperature, and death followed between the fifth and eighth days, the temperature falling before death. At the post-mortem ex- amination there was usually peritonitis, with copious exuda- tion, The kidney, spleen, and a Mouss, arrer Inocunation witn liver were enlarged and dark in Bacitius No. 2. (KiE1y.) many cases, there was red hepa- tisation of the lobes of the lungs, and generally pericarditis and hemorrhage under the pericardium. In 1885 Salmon, in the annual report of the United States Bureau of Animal Industry, published the result of his investigations into American hog cholera, which is identical with English pig typhoid. A motile figure-of-eight bacterium was isolated, each part being about twice as long as broad. The bacterium grew on nutrient gelatine without liquefying it, and on potato produced a brownish growth; broth tubes became turbid on the following day. Colonies in plate-cultivations were oval or circular, and brownish in colour. Six pigs inoculated subcutaneously were all said to have died of hog cholera, and the bacterium was again obtained from the blood of the heart and spleen. The bacteria proved fatal to mice, rabbits, guinea-pigs, and pigeons. In 1893 Welch and Clement described the hog-cholera bacillus as variable in form, and they further stated that a culture obtained Fic. 141.—Bioop or FresH SPLEEN OF SWINE FEVER. 351 from Klein, while not possessing the characters originally ascribed to it, could not in its form, biological characters, or pathogenic pro- perties, be distinguished from the American hog-cholera bacillus. In 1887 pig typhoid was investigated at Marseilles by Rietsch, Jobert, and Martinaud, and a bacillus found. This grew rapidly on all the nutrient media. In gelatine a growth was obtained in twenty-four hours at 18° C.; on blood serum and agar an opaque growth developed; and on potato the growth was yellowish. It was asserted that 'a young pig was killed by a culture in twenty- two days, and that the characteristic ulcerations were observed in the intestines, In 1887 pig typhoid was prevalent in Sweden, and Bang and Selander experimented with cultures from a rabbit that died after inoculation with a fragment of spleen from a diseased pig. The bacilli were motile, varying from rods to cocci, without spore-formation and pathogenic in mice, guinea-pigs, and rabbits, but not in pigeons. Pigs fed on broth-cultures were said to have succumbed to genuine pig typhoid. In the blood they were generally found in the form of short oval bacteria, but in the blood of the heart longer rods were sometimes found. Metchnikoff described a bacillus isolated by ’ ‘Chantemesse from an outbreak in France, as highly polymorphic. Smith identified the hog-cholera bacillus with the bacillus found by Schiitz, and this in turn has been identified with the bacillus of hemorrhagic septicemia. From these researches it would appear to be probable that one of the bacteria isolated by Klein, and those found by Salmon, Smith, Bang, Welch and Schiitz are identical; and further, that they have been identified with the bacillus of hemorrhagic septicemia. We may sum up the characters thus :— Bacillus of Klein, Salmon, Smith and Schiitz.—Very small rods, actively motile ; spore-formation not observed ; colonies circular and brown by transmitted light. Inoculated in the depth of gelatine faintly yellowish-white colonies develop along the track of the needle ; ‘on the surface an opalescent film; on potato they produce a straw- coloured layer, changing to brown. There is absence of indol in cultures containing peptone; the bacilli are fatal to mice, guinea- pigs, rabbits, and pigeons. Swine die after intravenous injection, but not, as a rule, after subcutaneous injection. . According to Caneva, the bacillus obtained from the Marseilles epidemic would appear to be closely allied, if not identical, with the bacillus of ferret disease (Eberth and Schimmelbusch), and the bacillus of Texas fever (Billings). 352 INFECTIVE DISEASES. Billings appears to have isolated two bacilli, one identical with the Marseilles bacillus, and the other with the hog-cholera bacillus. Bacillus of Rietsch and Jobert.—Rods about twice as long as broad, rather shorter than the bacillus of typhoid fever, longer and thicker than the American bacillus. They exhibit end-staining. They possess flagella, and are actively motile. They grow rapidly in nutrient media. They are only feebly pathogenic, ‘They are also said to be distinguished from the bacilli of hog-cholera by producing indol in solutions containing peptone, and by causing an acid reaction in milk. Bacillus of M‘Fadyean.—M‘Fadyean investigated swine fever in 1895, and found bacilli which he differentiated from hog-cholera bacilli. The method employed was to inoculate the surface of nutrient agar and of potato, with fragments torn out of the centre of a lymphatic gland, with specially constructed forceps. Inocula- tions were also made from the spleen pulp, and blood, in the usual way. They are from 1 to 2 yw in length, and ‘6 mw in breadth. They never grow into filaments, they do not form spores, and they are actively motile. They are readily stained by the watery solutions of the aniline dyes, and are decolorised by Gram’s method; with methylene-blue they show end-staining. The bacilli grow on gelatine without liquefaction, forming a thin white line along the needle track. On agar a thin, transparent pellicle forms, which is not easily visible at first, but gradually acquires a faint greyish tint. More characteristic appearances result in plate- cultivations of gelatine-agar, at 37°C. The colonies are distinctly visible in eighteen hours, appearing when viewed by transmitted light as bluish-white, circular specks ; each colony has a dark centre and a granular margin. In broth the bacilli produce turbidity after twenty-four hours. On potato there is no visible growth, even when the surface is inoculated with an abundance of material. On solid blood serum the growth is scanty. They grow in milk without producing coagulation. They are harmless to guinea-pigs and feebly pathogenic to rabbits. Several experiments were carried out upon swine. In the first, series the most rigid precautions were taken to prevent accidental infection with swine fever. Four young pigs were inoculated, upon a farm where there was no previous history of the disease. These pigs were killed, and the post-mortem examinations were said to show indications of swine fever, principally patches of diphtheritic material in the colon, and healing ulcers. The next series of pigs was inoculated at the Royal Veterinary College. Cultures were SWINE FEVER. 353 administered with milk to two pigs. Five days afterwards one pig died; and the mesenteric glands were congested, and the mucous membrane showed spots of necrosis. The other pig was killed, and there were ulcers in the colon. Jn a third experiment, eight pigs were fed with milk and broth cultures. These pigs were all killed at different dates, and most of them had ulceration of the colon ; in control experiments the intestine was normal. M‘Fadyean compared his bacillus with a culture of the hog- cholera bacillus, and found that the American organism grows at a lower temperature in gelatine, and colonies appear in plates much earlier. They produce a less transparent and thicker growth, and much greater turbidity in broth and a more abundant sediment. On potato they form an abundant growth at 37° C., at first yellow, later brown, with considerable resemblance to a glanders culture. Colonies upon gelatine-agar are distinguished by their opacity and sharp outline. Agar, potato, and broth cultures of the American organism consist of short ovoid forms like the bacilli of fowl cholera, while the bacillus isolated by M‘Fadyean has a closer resemblance to the bacillus of glanders. M‘Fadyean asserts that the American organism is not pathogenic to the pig. Pigs after feeding on broth cultures remained healthy, and showed no trace of swine fever when killed from one to three weeks afterwards. On the other hand, broth cultures of his bacillus produced the characteristic ulceration of the bowel. M‘Fadyean claims, therefore, to have discovered the true pathogenic organism of swine fever. He does not appear to have compared this bacillus with that obtained from the epidemic of swine fever at Marseilles. From the description of the mor- phological and other details there seems to be a close resemblance between the two. Not less than three and possibly four species of bacilli have been cultivated from swine fever, two at different times by Klein, one by Reitsch Jobert and Martinaud, and one by M‘Fadyean ; and cultures of all these bacilli have been credited with producing swine fever in experimental animals, and each one has been pronounced to be the contagium of the disease. We must conclude either that contaminated cultures were inoculated in some cases, or, what is far more probable, the swine fever which resulted in experimental animals was due to accidental infection; and until a bacillus has been cultivated from swine fever from which another investigator can prepare sub-cultures, and with those sub-cultures produce the typical ulcerations of swine fever in pigs on a farm, or on premises 23 354 INFECTIVE DISEASES. in which swine fever is unknown, we are justified in concluding that the contagium has not yet been discovered. The mistakes which are likely to occur when the same investi- gator isolates bacilli from cases of swine fever, and subsequently inoculates or feeds healthy swine, cannot be better illustrated than by quoting from a leaflet issued by the Board of Agriculture, pointing out the great precautions necessary to prevent accidental infection. “There seems reason to believe that the disease is not infre- quently introduced by means of persons who have been in contact with diseased animals. Pig owners, therefore, are advised to prevent strangers from at any time approaching their pigs, and should the admission to the premises of spayers or castrators be necessary, those persons should be required, before approaching the animals, to thoroughly wash their hands with soap and water, and to wash and disinfect their boots with a solution of carbolic acid and water, or some other suitable disinfectant. Such persons might also with advantage be required to wear, while operating, a waterproof apron, which should be washed and disinfected before the wearer is per- mitted to approach the animals to be operated on.” Protective Inoculation.—The experiments of Salmon and of Schweinitz have been referred to in another chapter (pp. 41, 46). A method of protective inoculation was attempted in America, but the experiments were unsuccessful, and the plan was abandoned. Stamping-out System.—Notification is compulsory, and the order in force is the Swine Fever Order of 1896, but the stamping- out system has not been applied ina thoroughly satisfactory manner, and the disease is still very prevalent. CHAPTER XXVI. SWINE MEASLES.—DISTEMPER IN DOGS.—EPIDEMIC DISEASE OF FERRETS.—EPIDEMIC DISEASE OF MICE. Swine MEAsLEs. Swine MEAsLes, or swine erysipelas, is described as an acute, in- fectious disease of swine which is very prevalent in France and Germany, but is included in this country in the term “swine fever.” According to some, it is a distinct disease, and distinguished from pig- typhoid by absence of the ulceration of the intestines which is so characteristic of that disease ; while, according to others, ulceration of the intestine and ileo-cwcal valve may be found post-mortem. The onset of the symptoms, as in pig typhoid, is very rapid; the animals cease to feed, and show other general signs of illness; the voice is hoarse, and there is a rapid rise of temperature. On the neck, chest, and abdomen, red patches make their appearance, which extend and coalesce, and change to a dark reddish or brownish colour. These symptoms may be followed by convulsions, and sometimes by paralysis of the hind legs; and death occurs in from one to four days. It is especially a disease of young pigs, and from 50 to 60 per cent. of infected animals die. On post-mortem examination there is hemorrhage and cedema in the patches of the skin, the lymphatic glands are swollen and dark red, the peritoneum is ecchymosed, the intestinal mucous membrane is congested and swollen, and the solitary follicles and Peyer’s patches are prominent, and in the neighbourhood of the ileo- cecal valve there are, according to Fliigge, ulcers of considerable size. The liver and spleen are congested and enlarged. Pasteur investi- gated swine measles or rouget, and described a figure-of-eight micro- coceus, which he believed to be the contagium of this disease. This organism appears to be identical with the bacterium of hemorrhagic septicemia, which is also commonly found in pig-typhoid. In experimenting with the virus obtained from the spleen 365 356 INFECTIVE DISEASES. Pasteur found that, by successive inoculation of rabbits, the virulence was exalted for rabbits, but attenuated for swine, and the virus which had thus been passed through the rabbit was used as a vaccine for swine, to protect them against virulent erysipelas. Pasteur found that by passing the virus through pigeons it was made more virulent for swine. In the blood, and the juice of the internal organs, and of the lymph glands, Schiitz found a minute bacillus identical with the bacillus of mouse septicaemia. Bacillus of Swine Erysipelas (Schiitz)—_Hxtremely minute rods ‘6 to 1°8 » in length, morphologically and in cultural charac- ters identical with the bacillus of mouse septicemia. Filaments and involution forms. Spore-formation present. House mice if inoculated with a pure culture die in two to four days. Pigeons are also very susceptible. Fowls and guinea-pigs i/ Nts Me Apri byline \ Fic. 142.—Bactnt or Swink Fic. 143.—Bioop or PicHoN INOCULATED ERYSIPELAS (BAUMGARTEN). WITH BaciLii or Swine ERysIPELas, x 600 (ScutTz). are immune. Rabbits after imoculation of the ear suffer from erysipelatous inflammation, identical with that produced by inocu- lation of the bacillus of mouse septicemia. The bacilli are also pathogenic in swine and sheep. Protective Inoculation.—With Pasteur’s vaccine immunity is said to be produced which lasts about a year. Schiitz and Schottelius found the minute bacilliin Pasteur’s vaccine, which they had already found in cases of swine erysipelas in Germany. The results of vaccination in France are said to be very satis- factory, but m test experiments in Germany they were not so favourable. Out of 119 vaccinated swine 5 per cent. died as the result of the inoculation, while the average loss in the ordinary way is 2 per cent. Metchnikoff found that the blood of immunised rabbits was antitoxic, and Lorenz maintains that the serum of swine which SWINE FEVER. 357 have recovered from swine erysipelas is also antitoxic, and will produce immunity in other animals. The treatment introduced by Lorenz is to inject serum in the proportion of 1 cc. to every 10 kilogrammes of the weight of the animal's body. Two days afterwards -5 to 1 cc. of virulent culture is injected, and after twelve days the dose is doubled. Lorenz inoculated 294 pigs; 12 were suffering from swine erysipelas, and of these 6 recovered and 6 died. In the opinion of the author this disease requires re-investigation, for if it be true that rouget or schweinrothlauf is associated with ulceration of the intestines, the recognition of it as a disease distinct from our English swine fever apparently rests upon the pres- ence of a bacillus, which cannot be distin- guished from the bacillus of mouse septiccemia. The question arises whether this bacillus is really the cause of a distinct disease, swine erysipelas, or, on the other hand, whether the bacillus is really the bacillus of mouse septicemia which has been isolated from certain cases of swine fever. The bacillus of mouse septicemia is widely distributed, and it may only be an accidental concomitant in rouget or schweinrothlauf. The presence of the bacterium of hemorrhagic septicemia in both rouget and pig typhoid would not prove identity, as this micro-organism is un- doubtedly only secondary in both diseases. There is great need, therefore, for further Pye. 144.—Purn-cuLruRE careful investigation. Clinical and patho- 1x Nurrrent GeELa- TINE OF BACILLI R In Swine ERyYSIPELAS country, to determine whether there are (BAUMGARTEN). really two diseases included under the name “swine fever.” If this prove to be the case, we must ascertain the clinical and pathological differences between rouget and pig typhoid. How can rouget be distinguished from cases of swine fever in which there is a patchy rash, paralysis of hind legs, but no ulceration of the intestine 2 Further, how is swine erysipelas with ulceration of the intestine and ileo-ccecal valve to be distinguished from an ordinary logical observations must be made in this case of pig typhoid ? 358 INFECTIVE DISEASES. Distemper In Does. Distemper is an infectious febrile disease of dogs, characterised by bronchial catarrh and discharge from the eyes. Bronchitis and pneumonia may supervene, or there may be intestinal catarrh ter- minating in dysenteric diarrhea, sometimes complicated by jaundice, The disease may affect the nervous system, and produce convulsive contractions of the muscles of the nose, ears, lips, and limbs. Occasionally there is an eruption, especially in animals which are out of condition. The virus exists in the discharge from the nostrils and eyes, and is given off from the lungs and the skin. One attack of the disease does not confer entire immunity ; and some dogs are completely insusceptible. Bacteria in Distemper.—Millais has isolated a micro-organism resembling the pneumococcus of Friedlander, which he believes to be the cause of the disease. The bacillus occurs with other bacteria and micrococci in the nasal discharge. Protective Inoculation.—Mixed cultures of these bacteria liquefy the gelatine, and the liquid has been used as a vaccine. When applied to the nose, it is said to produce a mild attack of distemper, which protects as much as an attack of the disease contracted naturally. These results require confirmation. Inoculation of the nasal discharge in healthy dogs has been practised, so that they may have the disease under favourable con- ditions ; but the system should not be encouraged, as dogs need not necessarily contract distemper. Vaccination with cow-pox lymph has been advocated, but it is perfectly useless. Stamping-out System.—Dogs suffering from distemper must be completely isolated. Any straw or litter which has been in contact with a diseased dog should be burnt. Clothing, collars, chains, and the kennel or premises inhabited, must be thoroughly disinfected. The animal after recovery should be washed with carbolic soap. Eripemic Disease or FERRETS. Eberth and Schimmelbusch investigated an epidemic disease of ferrets (frettchen-seuche), and isolated a bacillus, which in mor- phology and cultivation agrees very closely with the bacillus of hemorrhagic septicemia. Eripemic Disease or Mice. Lofler investigated an epidemic disease which occurred in mice kept in confinement, and isolated a bacillus resembling Bacillus typhosus. EPIDEMIC DISEASE OF MICE. 359 Bacillus Typhi Murium.—Rods varying in length; and fila- ments; motile; flagellated. The colonies are circular, brownish and granular on the surface of obliquely solidified gelatine. The bacteria inoculated on the surface produce a greyish-white semi- transparent growth, and on agar and potato the appearance of the growth is very similar. They can be cultivated readily in milk and in broth. White and field mice are killed in from one to two weeks, when given bread moistened with a culture. Liffier claims to have used this method with success in Thessaly, where there was a plague of field mice causing great losses to agriculturists. CHAPTER XXVII. ASIATIC CHOLERA. — CHOLERA NOSTRAS. — CHOLERAIC DIARRH@A FROM MEAT-POISONING.—DYSENTERY.—CHOLERAIC DIARRHGA IN FOWLS. ASIATIC CHOLERA. THERE are several diseases in man associated with diarrhcea, which have certain characters in common, but are totally distinct. They include Asiatic cholera, cholera nostras, dysentery, and choleraic diarrhea. Asiatic cholera is an endemic disease of the Delta of the Ganges, a locality which has become notorious as the home of cholera. Cholera is a filth disease; and the accumulation of filth on the banks of the Ganges, with contamination of the water, and the climate, afford most favourable conditions for the development of the cholera virus. Four great cholera epidemics have originated in, and spread from, India: in 1817, in 1826, in 1846, and in 1865. Cholera follows the routes of pilgrims and caravans, and now, owing to the rapid means of communication by steamers and railways, it spreads to the most distant parts of the world, covering in a few weeks or days distances which in former times could only be traversed in several months or even years. In 1892 the epidemic passed from India, through Afghanistan, to Russia in Asia, and quickly spread westwards along the route of the trans-Caspian railway ; and all this occurred within the space of a few weeks. By Russian emigrants it was carried to Hamburg and Antwerp; and the virus, finding a suitable environment in the former place, produced a severe epidemic there. Thus, in about three months, it was brought into close proximity with England. Mecca is one of the great infective centres of the world, for there all the conditions are found for the propagation of cholera, including filth, overcrowding, and the water of the famous Holy Well, which is used for ablutions and drinking purposes. The return of 360 ASIATIC CHOLERA. 361 the pilgrims to Egypt, and the proximity of England to Egypt, necessitate the greatest possible precautions to prevent the intro- duction of the disease into this country. In 1884 a German Commission was sent out to India, and Koch discovered a micro-organism which he described as a curved or comma-shaped bacillus, and pronounced to be the contagium of this disease. Fic. 145.—Cover-cLass Preparation or A Dror or Meat INFUSION, containing a pure-cultivation of comma-bacilli, with (a) spirilliform threads, x 600. (Koc#.) Spirillum cholerz Asiaticze (Comma-bacillus, Koch).—Curved rods, spirilla, and threads. The curved rods or commas are about half the length of a tubercle-bacillus. They occur isolated, or attached to each other forming S-shaped organisms or longer screw-forms, the latter resembling the spirilla of relapsing fever. a pfs ~25 Ce § Lie fe 8 ad S oe 080 20) x eter GR 88 BE % me te 7 oul f Fic. 146.—ARTHROSPORES ; (c) Comma-bacillus breaking up into spheres; (b, ¢), formation of spheres in spiral forms; (d, e), groups of spheres; (f) spirilla with spheres from an old cultivation; (yg) germination of the spheres. (HvEppE.) Finally they may develop into spirilliform threads. In old cultiva- tions threads are found with swellings or irregularities (Fig. 148). The commas are actively motile, and possess flagella (Fig. 147). Their movements) and development into spirilla may be studied in drop-cultivations. Arthrospore formation has been described by Hueppe (Fig. 146). In plate-cultivations, at a temperature of from 362 INFECTIVE DISEASES. 16° to 20° C., the colonies develop as little specks, which begin to be visible after about twenty-four hours. Examined with a low power, and a small diaphragm, these colonies have the following characteristics. They appear as little masses, granular, and Fic. 147.—FLAGELLA OF COMMA-BACILLI; STAINED BY LOFFLER’S MElHon (FRANKEL AND PFEIFFER). yellowish-white in colour, and sometimes very faintly tinged with red, which have liquefied the gelatine, and sunk down to the bottom of the resulting excavations. : In test-tubes of slightly alkaline nutrient gelatine (10 per cent.), Fic. 148.—Invotution Forms, x 700 Fic. 149.—CoLonres Or COMMA-BACILLI (Van ERMENGEm). on Nutrient GELATINE, NATURAL Size (Kocw). the appearance of the growth is very striking. In typical cultures it begins to be visible in about twenty-four hours. Liquefaction sets in very slowly, commencing at the top of the needle track ASIATIC CHOLERA. 363 around an enclosed bubble of air, and forming a funnel continuous with the lower part of the growth; the latter preserves for several days its resemblance to a white thread (Plate II., Fig. 1). In about eight days, however, lique- faction takes place along the whole of the needle track. On the surface of agar-agar the cultivation develops as a Fic. 150.—Cotonres or Kocn’s Comma- BACILLI, x 60. white, semi-transparent layer, with well-defined margin. The appearance on blood serum is very similar ; liquefaction very slowly takes place. In broth they form a wrinkled film on the surface, there is a rapid and abundant growth at the temperature of the WT \ iG) 4 tile oe Nl Maram Wi (HITS a] Hh} | PS {| ‘ ; / a NG My TaN Fic. 151.—Cover-ciass Preparation Fic. 152.—Cover-cLass PREPARATION FROM THE CONTENTS OF A CHOLERA or CHOLERA DrJEcTA oN Damp LinEN INTESTINE, x 600. (a) Remains of the (two days old), x 600. Great prolife- epithelial cells ; (6) Comma-bacillus ; ration of the bacilli with spirilla (a) (ec) Group of comma-hacilli (Koch). (Koch). blood, and the same applies to sterilised milk; and they will even multiply in sterilised water. In potato-cultivations the microbe will only grow at the temperature of the blood (37° C.), forming a slightly brown, transparent layer. Inoculation of a cultivation of the bacillus in the duodenum of guinea-pigs, with and without 364 INFECTIVE DISEASES. ligation of the bile-duct, has given positive results. More recently these results have been confirmed by the following method: Five ce. of a 5 per cent. solution of potash were injected into the stomach of a guinea-pig, and twenty minutes after, 10 cc. of a cultivation of comma-bacilli, diffused in broth, were similarly intro- duced. Simultaneously with the latter, an injection of tincture of opium was made into the abdominal cavity, in the proportion of 1 cc. for every 200 grammes weight of the animal. Those who have had success with inoculation experiments maintain that choleraic symptoms were produced without any trace of peritonitis or putrid infection, and that the comma-bacilli of Koch were again found in the intestinal contents, and fresh cultivations established. Fic. 153.—SecTIon or THE Mucous MEMBRANE OF A CHOLERA INTESTINE, x 600. A tubular gland (a) is divided transversely ; in its interior (b) and between the epithelium and the basement membrane (c) are numerous comma-bacilli (Koch). On the other hand, these results have been disputed, the fatal effects of the inoculation attributed to septiceemic poisoning, and the proliferation of the bacilli considered to be dependent upon an abnormal condition of the intestines, induced by the injection of tincture of opium. It has, however, been shown that these organisms, like several others which have been isolated from intestinal dis- charges, produce definite poisonous substances. The comma-bacilli were found in the superficial necrosed layer of the intestine, in the mucous flakes and liquid contents of the intestinal canal of cases of Asiatic cholera. It is stated that they were also detected ASIATIC CHOLERA. 365 in a tank which contained the water supply of a neighbourhood where cholera cases occurred; but comma-shaped organisms are frequently present in sewage-contaminated water. Koch’s comma- bacilli are aerobic, and their development is arrested by deprivation of oxygen. They are destroyed by drying on a cover glass, but retain their vitality longer when dried on silk threads. Cultures are sterilised by exposure for fifteen minutes to 55° C., and by various antiseptic substances. |) ' ii Hi i), ah Win Fic. 154.—Pure-cuntivations In Nurrient GELATINY. «a, Kocu’s CHOLERA Baciiius, twenty-four hours old. 0b, Finkier’s Bacrius, twenty-four hours old. Meruops or SrarniInG THE CoMMA-BACILLI or Kocu. In cover-glass preparations they may be well stained in the ordinary way, with anaqueous solution of methyl-violet or fuchsine, or by the vapid method, without passing through the flame (p. 85, Babés’ method). Nicati and Reitsch’s method. A small quantity of the stools, or of the scraping of the intestinal mucous membrane, is spread out on a glass slide and dried, then steeped during some seconds in sublimate solution, or in osmic acid (1 to 100). It is then stained by immersion in fuchsine-aniline solution (1 or 2 grammes of Bale fuchsine dissolved in a saturated aqueous solution of aniline), washed, dried, and mounted in Canada balsam. 366 INFECTIVE DISEASES. In sections of the intestine their presence may be demonstrated by :— (a) Koch’s method. Sections of the intestine, which must be well hardened in absolute alcohol, are left for twenty-four hours in a strong, watery solution of methylene-blue, or for a shorter time if the solution is warmed; then treated in the usual way. (b) Babes’ method. Sections, preferably from a recent case of cholera, and made as soon as possible after death, are left for twenty-four hours in an aqueous solution of fuchsine, then washed in distilled water, faintly acidulated with acetic acid, or in sublimate solution 1 in 1000, passed rapidly through alcohol, and finally treated in the usual way. Klein investigated cholera in India, and does not accept Koch’s conclusions. With regard to the inoculation experiments, Klein believes that the living choleraic comma-bacilli, even if introduced in large numbers into the small intestine, are quite innocuous, but capable of great multiplication if the intestine is previously, from some cause or another, diseased; the chemical products of the comma-bacilli then act as poisons analogous to the ptomaines obtained from other putrefactive bacteria. The observations made by Roy, Brown, and Sherrington, in Spain, tended to confirm Koch’s views. Comma-bacilli were found to be present, in some cases, in enormous numbers, and the frequency of their occurrence led these observers to believe that they must bear some relation to the disease. At the same time, a as they failed to find them in all cs Wee te \ cases, they regarded the existence ~ a C ; % ) Z “ of a causal relation as not proven. ) ) f /y They failed to find the Naples ~ a yA %, bacterium, or a small, straight wo bacillus noted by Klein; and they drew attention to certain Fic. 155.—CoMMA-SHAPED ORGANISMS peculiar mycelium-like threads WITH OTHER BacTERIA IN SEWAGE- . CONTAMINATED WATER, x 1200. in the mucous membrane of the : intestines ; but these cannot be considered to have any significance. Methylene-blue has been employed by Koch and others, including the author, for staining sections of the intestine from cholera cases, and had they been constantly present, it is hardly possible that such striking objects could have been overlooked. Again, we must bear in mind that hypho-mycetous fungi occasionally have been found to occur sapro- phytically in the intestinal canal, as well as in the lungs, external auditory meatus, and elsewhere. Cunningham, of Calcutta, maintains ASIATIC CHOLERA. 367 that Koch’s comma-bacilli are not constantly found; and that the comma-bacilli obtained from typical cholera cases show a great variation in cultivation, and cannot be distinguished from comma-bacilli from other sources. Cunningham asserts that comma-bacilli resembling Koch’s are found in the intestine in health. Sternberg, on the other hand, made a number of examina- tions of the evacuations of yellow fever patients and healthy indi- viduals, and failed to find any ¥Fia.156.—ComMaA-BACILLI OF THE MOUTH, x 700 (Van ERMENGEM). micro-organism resembling the cholera spirillum. Various comma-bacilli have been isolated from different sources and compared with Koch’s comma-bacillus. Comma-bacilli have been Ny Wey = NaN US; Noyiira u Lnr 2 AAS =) LOvVe WD Ute ») ASHES ON = ss nN) a Dic bs alll Ls Ne oo we Fic. 157.—FinKLER’s CoOMMA-BACILLI 5 FROM CHOLERA NOSTRAS, Xx 700 (Fiueer). found in the mouth by Lewis ; in cholera nostras by Finkler and Prior; in cheese by Deneke ; in hay infusion and sewage by Weibel ; in the intestines of fowls by Gamaleia, and in water by Sanarelli, Whether the comma-bacillus is the cause of cholera or not, its detection is an aid in diagnosis. If we are dealing with a case alleged to be one of Asiatic cholera, and a micro- organism is found in the intestinal evacuations, which can be differentiated from the comma-bacillus described by Finkler in cholera nostras, and identified with the comma-bacillus de- scribed by Koch, we are justified in regarding the case as one of Asiatic cholera. But we cannot diagnose Koch’s comma-bacillus, with certainty, unless we know the source of the culture. The clinical symptoms of cholera in man, and especially the presence Fic. 158.—DENEKE’s COMMA-BACILLI, yrom CHEESE, x 700 (FLiece). of rice-water stools, must be taken into account, together with the biological, morphological, and chemical characteristics of the bacilli which are found to be present. There are several 368 INFECTIVE DISEASES. chemical tests which can be applied to cultures. According to Frinkel, the Bujwid-Dunham test can be relied upon to distin- guish Koch’s comma-bacillus from the comma-bacillus of Finkler- Prior (cholera nostras), and from those found by Gamaleia. The comma-bacilli are inoculated in broth containing peptone, and, after twelve hours in the incubator, a drop of strong sulphurie acid added to the culture will produce a red colour, owing to the presence of indol. A test which distinguishes Koch’s comma- bacillus from Finkler-Prior’s and Deneke’s was introduced by Cahen. A solution of litmus is added to the broth, and the culture placed in the incubator, until the following day; in the case of Koch’s commas, the colour will have disappeared. Koch points out that in the bacteriological. diagnosis of cholera the first step is to examine the mucus in the evacuations, or in the intestine if the examination is made after death. Cover-glass preparations should be stained with dilute Ziehl-Neelsen solution. Cultures are next made in peptone, and in eight hours will give the indol reaction. In twenty-four hours the colonies may be examined on plate-cultivations. The peptone cultures are prepared by adding a trace of the choleraic evacuations, or of mucus containing the bacilli, to a sterilised 1 per cent. solution of peptone, with ‘5 to 1 per cent. of common salt. The solution must be alkaline, and the culture is placed in the incubator at 37° C. The pathogenic effects can be ascertained by diffusing the bacilli from an agar-culture in broth, and injecting it into the peritoneal cavity. Toxic Products.—Brieger isolated several toxic products which he had found in association with putrefaction, such as cadaverin and putrescin ; but there were also present two new toxic substances, one producing cramps and muscular tremors in inoculated animals, and the other lowering the temperature and depressing the action of the heart. Later, Brieger in conjunction with Frankel, succeeded in isolating a tox-albumin from pure cultures. Guinea-pigs were killed in two or three days, but rabbits had an immunity. Pfeiffer found that cultures contained a poisonous principle which proved fatal to guinea-pigs in extremely minute doses. It is broken up by aleohol and by boiling, and secondary products formed, of very much mitigated virulence. Similar toxic products were obtained from cultures of both Finkler-Prior’s and Metchnikoff’s commas. Protective Inoculation.—Haffkine has introduced a system of protective inoculation, which is founded on the principle of inducing the formation of antitoxins, or defensive proteids. Comma-bacilli when first cultivated from a cholera patient are not sufficiently ASIATIC CHOLERA. 369 virulent, and the virulence is increased by cultivation in the peritoneal cavities of a succession of guinea-pigs. This successive cultivation is carried on until a virus is obtained which proves fatal in a few hours when inoculated into the peritoneum. A culture from the peritoneum is obtained on an agar plate-cultivation, and a pure sub-culture on agar is thoroughly shaken up with broth. This constitutes the vaccinating fluid. It may be used as a living vaccine, or the comma-bacilli killed by the addition of carbolic acid. Haffkine, having studied the pathological and physiological effects on some sixty persons, mostly scientists interested in the subject, and finding the treatment to be harmless, transferred his operations to localities in India affected by cholera. The inhabitants of the northern part of India were the first to come forward and submit themselves to the inoculation. In the course of the first year 22,703 were inoculated in the North-West Provinces and Oudh, and in the Punjab. All classes of, the population were included. In the second year operations were carried out in those parts of the country where cholera always prevails, and where, therefore, the method could be more satisfactorily tested. From March 1894, to July 1895, 19,473 individuals were inoculated in some of the most affected localities. From observations made at Calcutta by Dr. Simpson, from March 1894 to August 1895, cholera occurred in 36 houses containing inoculated people. There were 521 inhabitants in the infected houses, of whom 181 were inoculated from 1 to 459 days before the occurrence, while 340 remained uninoculated. The uninoculated had 45 cases with 39 deaths from cholera; the inoculated had 4 deaths, 1 occurring 451 days after the first inoculation, and 3 others from 1 to 4 days after the first inoculation. These four cases had not been re-inoculated. If the occurrences in inoculated and non-inocu- lated during the first 10 days were set aside, and those considered that occurred after the 10 days expired, then, according to Dr. Simpson, the proportion of cases was 19:27 and that of deaths 17:24 times smaller in the inoculated then in the uninoculated. Cholera broke out in the Gya gaol, and inoculations were made after 6 cases, with 5 deaths, had occurred. During the stay of the prisoners in the gaol, there were 209 uninoculated, with 7 cases and 5 deaths, and 211 inoculated, with 5 cases and 4 deaths. In July and August in the same year cholera attacked the East Lancashire Regiment. Out of 773 men there were 133 inoculated and 640 uninoculated, 24 370 INFECTIVE DISEASES. The occurrences of cases and deaths were :— In 640 uninoculated 120 cases (18°75 7%), 79 deaths (12°34 %). In 133 inoculated 18 cases (13°53 %), 13 deaths (9°77 7). These results were, it is said, due to the weakness of the vaccines procurable at that period of the work, and to the small doses used. There were a great many records kept of the results of inocula- tion of coolies on tea estates in different localities. After a summary of the results Haffkine concludes, in his Report to the Government of India, that, in his opinion, the experimental stage was not yet in so advanced a condition as to be completely closed; but that the observations made and records collected justified steps being taken to give the inoculations a more : renee i nt extended trial. a ci r in ( ul \ | CHOLERA NOostTRAs. Cholera nostras, English cholera, or English dysentery, produces an inflamma- tion of the mucous membrane of the bowels with croupous exudation. The large intestine is commonly affected, and | i i} the mucous membrane may be covered with small superficial ulcers. The disease is associated with severe diarrhea. Finkler and Prior obtained a comma- bacillus from the evacuations, which they believed to be identical with the comma- bacillus found by Koch in Asiatic cholera. Koch pointed out that there were marked differences in the biological character of the two micro-organisms. Spirillum Finkler-Prior (Comma- : : I Hh iil ry) iy i Hi : (a Fic. 159.—PursE-cuLtTivaTion 7 OF THE SPIRILLUM FINKLER- Prior, In Nutrient Gera- TINE. In thirty-six hours. bacillus in Cholera nostras).—Curved rods, thicker than the comma-bacillus of Koch, and spirilla. The colonies on plate- cultivations are very much larger than those of the comma-bacillus of Koch of the same age. They have a very faint yellowish-brown tinge, a well-defined border, and a distinctly granular appearance. They liquefy nutrient gelatine very rapidly, so that the first plate of a series is, as a rule, completely liquefied on the day following inoculation, and the second plate in two or three days more. In a test-tube cultivation in nutrient gelatine the appearances are especially characteristic: the gelatine is very rapidly CHOLERAIC DIARRHGiA FROM MEAT POISONING. 371 liquefied along the whole track of the needle, so that the cultivation resembles a conical sack, or the finger of a glove turned inside out. On a sloping surface of nutrient agar-agar a white moist layer forms very quickly, On potato they grow at the ordinary temperature of the air, producing a brownish layer and corrosion of the surface of the potato. They have been shown to be pathogenic. CHoLtERAIc Diarrua@a From Mzat Poisontna. There are two varieties of choleraic diarrhea from meat poisoning, and both are associated with vomiting, diarrhea, pain in the abdo- men, in severe cases followed by suppression of urine, collapse, and death. These conditions are brought about by poisonous foods, and include those cases of poisoning by tinned meats, pork pies, hams, cheese, sardines, and other articles of food improperly prepared. In most cases putrefaction has taken place, owing to the action of various bacteria. Associated with their growth we find highly poisonous substances, but no bacteria are found in the body in these: cases. They are all due to chemical poisoning ; but Klein has also described cases of poisoning due to the growth of bacteria without the presence of putrefaction. The latter were of the nature of an infectious disease. In the Welbeck. poisoning cases, described by Ballard, the poisonous hams contained a short bacillus, which was also found in the kidney and spleen in the fatal cases in man. In the Carlisle epidemic, which was due to poisonous pork pies, the pork and gravy stock proved fatal to mice, and from the infected mice a bacillus was cultivated, which, administered to mice by feeding or subcutaneous inoculation, produced enteritis, diarrhcea, and congestion of the lungs. Gartner cultivated Bacillus enteritidis from the spleen in a fatal case of meat poisoning. Gaffky obtained a similar bacillus in cases of gastro-enteritis, following the consumption of meat and sausages, which had been made of horseflesh. Bacillus of Choleraic Diarrhoea from Meat-poisoning (Klein).—Rods from 3 to 9 win length, 1°3 » wide, rounded at their extremities, singly or in chains of two. Spore-formation occurs, the spores being 1 m thick, oval, and situated in the centre or at the end of the rod. Feeding mice with the bacilli and inoculation produced positive results. At the autopsy, pneumonia, peritonitis, pleuritis, enlargement of the liver and spleen, and hemorrhages were observed, and bacilli were present in the blood and exudations of these animals, They 372 INFECTIVE DISEASES. occurred in the blood and juices, and especially in the glomeruli of the kidneys, of several fatal cases of choleraic diarrhea. Bacillus enteritidis (Girtner).—Short rods in pairs, and short chains. They are motile; spore-formation not observed. Colonies are granular, and old colonies at the margin have an appearance of Fic. 160.—TropicaL DysEnTERY. Mucous membrane of large intestine some months after an acute attack: a,a, representing remains of mucosa ; b,b, inter- vening parts corresponding to the muscularis (HAMILTON). powdered glass. On the surface of gelatine a thick greyish-white film develops, which in time becomes wrinkled. In the depth of gelatine a white filament forms. The gelatine is not liquefied. On agar the film is slightly yellowish. On potato it is similar in colour, moist and shining. On blood serum it is very similar, Mice fed CHOLERAIC DIARRHEA IN FOWLS. 373 with the bacilli die in one or two days. Subcutaneous injection is fatal in guinea-pigs and rabbits in from two to five days. Dogs, cats, and fowls are immune. The bacilli were obtained from a cow suffering from a disease associated with diarrhoea, and from the spleen of a man who died twelve hours after partaking of the flesh of this animal. DysEnTEry. Dysentery is a disease of tropical climates associated with in- flammation and ulceration of the large intestine (Fig. 160). At first the discharge from the bowel is a whitish or brownish mucus, which soon becomes blood-stained; later the evacuations become thin and watery, with altered blood clots, fragments of mucous membrane, and pieces of false membrane ; and in some cases they become purulent. The virus is believed to be in the intestinal discharges, which by contaminating water or soil may give rise to other cases, Micrococci have been found in dysentery, but the micro-organism which has received most attention is a protozoon, the Ameba coli, which will be described in another chapter. Cuoteratic Diarruaa In Fow1s. Choleraic diarrhea in fowls, or gastro-enteritis cholerica, is an infectious disease of fowls, occurring in Russia during the summer. The disease is very like fowl-cholera. The birds are sleepy, and suffer from diarrhea, but the temperature is not raised, as in fowl-cholera. After death there is usually an abundance of greyish liquid in the small intestine, which is stained with blood. It was investigated by Gamaleia, who found a comma-bacillus, to which he gives the name Vibrio Metchnikovi. Spirillum of Fowl-enteritis (Vibrio Metchnikovi).—Curved rods and spirilla; thicker, shorter, and more curved than Koch’s commas. They are motile, and possess a single flagellum at one end. They stain with the usual dyes. Spore-formation doubtful. In plate- cultivations minute white colonies appear in from twelve to sixteen hours, and the gelatine is liquefied. The colonies in about three days resemble those of both Finkler-Prior’s and Koch’s comma-bacilli, some colonies being more like the one kind, and some like the other. In the depth of gelatine the growth is very much like that of Koch’s comma-bacillus, possessing the characteristic air-bubble appearance. 374 INFECTIVE DISEASES. On agar a slightly yellowish growth is obtained, resembling that of Koch’s commas ; on potato a yellowish-brown or chocolate layer develops after incubation at the temperature of the blood, very similar to cultures from Asiatic cholera. Broth becomes turbid, and a wrinkled film forms on the surface; the addition of sulphuric acid gives the indol test. The spirilla grow in milk, and coagulate it; the milk becoming strongly acid, and the casein being precipitated. They are pathogenic in chickens, pigeons, and guinea-pigs. Pigeons die in about twelve hours after a subcutaneous injection ; and the spirilla are found abundantly in blood from the heart. Guinea-pigs die from acute septicemia in about twenty-four hours. The spirilla are found in the blood and internal organs. Inoculation of pigeons and guinea-pigs with sterilised cultures will produce immunity. CHAPTER XXVIII. TUBERCULOSIS. TUBERCULOSIS is a communicable disease of man and animals, charac- terised by the formation of new growths associated with the presence of the tubercle bacillus. Von Bayle, in 1810, was the first to describe little growths like millet seeds, which were considered to be character- istic of consumption or phthisis. Laennec, in 1834, attached much more importance to the existence of caseous matter and classified miliary tubercle, crude tubercle, granular tubercle, and encysted tubercle, as varieties of tuberculosis. Virchow would not accept all these varieties as tubercular, and only regarded those conditions associated with the presence of miliary tubercles as genuinely tubercular. Laennec’s so-called crude tubercle, for example, was simply due to pneumonic caseation. Villemin threw entirely fresh light upon this controversy by proving that tuberculosis was a communicable disease. Rabbits and guinea-pigs, inoculated with tubercular sputum or caseous tubercle, developed miliary tubercle in. a few weeks. Sanderson confirmed these experiments, and pointed out that foreign bodies would produce experimental tuberculosis in rabbits. Cohnheim also confirmed the experiments of Villemin, and maintained that tuberculosis was a specific inoculable disease, and, therefore, everything was tubercular which, on inoculation, produced tuberculosis. Koch, in 1882, announced the discovery of the tubercle bacillus, and expressed the opinion that without the tubercle bacillus there could be no tuberculosis, Tubercle was defined as tissue containing the tubercle bacillus, whatever might be the clinical manifestations of the case, or the microscopical and naked-eye appearances of the diseased parts, A tubercle is a small growth about the size of a millet seed. In the early stage it is circular, hard, grey in colour, and lustrous; but when it undergoes necrosis and caseation it becomes soft and yellowish. ‘Tn the very early stage it consists of a little collection of round 375 376 INFECTIVE DISEASES. cells, in which it is possible, though often with extreme difficulty, to demonstrate the tubercle bacillus. The cells originate in the proliferation of endothelial connective tissue and white blood cells. Later on, large oval or circular multi-nucleated cells, or giant cells, make their appearance. The tubercle bacilli are only occasionally found in the interior of human giant cells, whereas in the lower animals, in equine and bovine tuberculosis more especially, the bacilli are often present in great numbers, and very commonly in the form of conspicuous rings, visible under a low power of the microscope. Hic. 161.—TuBERcLE oF THE LUNG IN A VERY EARLY STAGE, x 400: a, An alveolar wall; 6, blood-corpuscles in capillaries of the same; c, blood-corpuscles extravasated into the alveolar cavities; d, alveolar capillaries filled with blood-corpuscles carried forward by the tubercle which is growing into the alveolar cavity ; ¢, large endothelium-like cells, of which the tubercle in this stage is mainly composed ; f, portion of a branch of the pulmonary artery injected (HamILtTon). Whether the absence of blood-vessels or the action of the bacillus is the main factor in producing caseation, is an open question. When suppuration follows caseation, as commonly happens in tuberculosis of the lungs in man, and in experimental tuberculosis in animals, an wbscess forms. In cattle there is a remarkable tendency to the formation of calcareous deposit in the caseous masses. The tubercle may not degenerate and die, but live and develop. ‘TUBERCULOSIS. 377 The giant cells, which are more or less central, have been described as sending off processes, which, by dividing and subdividing, and Fic. 162.—Primary TupercLe or LuNG TWO TO THREE WEEKS OLD, x 50: a, Portion of wall of a branch of the pulmonary artery ; b,b, giant cells with concentric arrangement of fibrous tissue; c, centre of tubercle beginning to caseate ; d, small branch of pulmonary artery seen on transverse section ; ¢, injected capillaries of the alveolar walls (HAMILTON). interlacing, form a reticulum, or meshwork. Towards the periphery of the tubercle the reticulum may become arranged in the form of a capsule as the age of the tubercle advances, and the reticular giant cell becomes eventually converted into fibrous tissue. The bacillus has disappeared, and the tubercle has healed. Giant cells cannot be relied upon — to indicate tuberculosis. They are not always present in tubercu- losis, and they are not peculiar to tubercle, being found, for example, in actinomycosis. The only certain indication of tuberculosis is the pre- sence of the tubercle bacillus, which Fic. 163.—Larce Ova Giant CELL yRoM TUBERCLE oF Lune x 300: a, Granular centre; b, nucleated periphery forming a mantle-like sheath; c, processes from the same. 378 INFECTIVE DISEASES. can be revealed either by microscopical examination of the suspected tissue, or after inoculation in guinea-pigs. Bacillus Tuberculosis (Koch).—Rods, 2 to 4 » and occa- sionally 8 » long, very thin, and rounded at the ends. They are straight or curved, and frequently beaded, and occur singly, in pairs, or in bundles; there are algo involution forms and short branched threads. Spore-formation is observed in old cultures. They are non-motile. In the interior of giant cells they are often accompanied by grains which exhibit the same colour reaction. The bacilli in tissue sections of bovine tuberculosis are shorter and less granular than those in human tubercular sputum, but in milk they are quite as long, and even longer, and very distinctly granular or beaded, and are thus brought much closer, morpho- logically, to the bacilli in human sputum. Speaking generally, however, the average length of the human bacilli is greater than the average length of the bacilli in cow’s milk, but the longest of the bovine bacilli cannot be distinguished in length from the longest human bacilli. There are, however, exceptional cases, for in some preparations of pus from human lungs the bacilli are remarkable, not only for their thinness, and their uniformly beaded character, but more particularly for their extraordinary length. They should be compared with other preparations, in which the bacilli, though in human sputum, are sometimes much more distinctly rod-shaped, much shorter and thicker, with complete absence of any beaded appearance. Neither length nor granularity is a characteristic sufficient to denote any specific difference between human and bovine bacilli. The author has examined minutely the bacilli in tuberculosis of other animals, such as the horse, pig, and cat; and of birds—the fowl, guinea-fowl, pheasant, and ostrich. Here, again, minute morphological differences can be observed. For example, in many cases in fowls the bacilli are conspicuously short and straight. In the liver and lungs of an ostrich, packets of short rod-forms are found, while in other parts of the same sections the bacilli attain a very great length. Many of the long, sinuous forms exhibit a peculiar terminal enlargement. There are also short rods with a similar appearance, and free ovoid bodies, singly and in groups, which, from their connection with the bacilli, and their sharply defined outline in the free state, are similar to spores in old cultures. Thus, morphological differences are found under different circum- stances, and within limits the morphology of the tubercle bacillus varies with its environment. Koch first succeeded in cultivating the bacillus by employing DESCRIPTION OF PLATE XI. Bacillus tuberculosis. The figures in this plate represent- the bacilli of tuberculosis in different animals, examined under the same conditions of amplifica- tion and illumination. x 1200. Lamp-light illumination, Fig. 1.—Bacilli in pus from the wall of a human tubercular cavity. In this specimen the bacilli are shorter than those in tubercular sputum, and are very markedly beaded. Fig. 2.—Bacilli in pus from a tubercular cavity from another case in man. They are present in the preparation in enormous numbers, The proto- plasm occupies almost the whole of the sheath, and the bacilli are strikingly thin and long. Fig. 3.—Bacilli in sputum from an civaned case of phthisis, showing the ordinary appearance of bacilli in sputum; some beaded, others stained in their entirety; occurring both singly and in pairs, and in groups resembling Chinese letters. Fie. 4.—Bacilli in « section from the lung in a case of tuberculosis in man, The bacilli in human tuberculosis are found in, and between, the tissue cells ; and sometimes, as in equine and bovine tuberculosis, in the interior of giant cells, but not so commonly. Fic. 5.—From a cover-glass preparation of the deposit in a sample of milk from a tubercular cow. The bacilli were longer than the average length of bacilli in bovine tissue sections, and many were markedly beaded. Fia. 6.—From a section of the brain in a case of tubercular meningitis in a calf, showing a giant cell containing bacilli with the characters usually found in sections of bovine tuberculosis. Fig. 7.—From a section of the liver of a pig with tubercle bacilli at the margin of a caseous nodule. Fig. 8.—From a cover-glass preparation of a crushed caseous mesenteric gland from a rabbit infected by ingestion of milk from a cow with tuberculosis of the udder, Fig. 9.—From a section of lung in a case of equine tuberculosis, showing a giant cell crowded with tubercle bacilli. Fig. 10.—From a section of lung from a case of tuberculosis in the cat, with very numerous tubercle bacilli. Fic. 11.—From a cover-glass preparation of a crushed caseous nodule from the liver of a fowl, with masses of bacilli. These are for the most part short, straight rods; but other forms, varying from long rods to mere granules, are also found. Fig. 12.—From sections of the liver and of the lung in a case of tubercu- losis of a Rhea, Isolated bacilli are found, as well as bacilli packed in large cells, colonies of sinuous bacilli, and very long forms with terminal spore-like bodies and free oval grains. The preparations from which these figures were drawn were all stained by the Ziehl-Neelsen method, with the exception of the first, which was stained by Ehrlich’s method. Plate XI. BACILLUS ee a SIs. | EMCrockeshanle fect. \ Vincent Brooks,Day & Son, lath. \ TUBERCULOSIS. 379 blood serum. Solid blood serum, with or without the addition of gelatine, was employed, and the cultures incubated at 37°C. The growth takes place very slowly, and only between the temperatures of 30° C.and 41° C. In about eight or ten days the growth appears as little whitish or yellowish scales and grains. The bacillus can also be cultivated in a glass capsule, on blood serum, and the appearances of the growth studied under the microscope. The scales or pellicles were described by Koch as made up of colonies of a perfectly characteristic appearance, which may be still further studied by making a cover-glass impression. They are then seen to be composed of bacilli, arranged more or less with their long axis corresponding with that of the colony itself, and with an appreciable interval between the individual bacilli. The colonies themselves appear as fine curved lines, the smallest being mostly S-shaped. Longer colonies have serpentine twistings and bendings, which often recall the curves of fancy lettering. The ends of the ~ ‘N lines run to sharp points, 4 oN but the middle of the growth is spindle-formed. ewe The youngest colonies are = extremely delicate and narrow, but the older ‘ colonies increase in size, are thicker across, and, blending with each other, gradually obliterate the characteristic appearances; a lamellated growth results, which increases, and gives the appearance to the naked eye of the scale or pellicle already described. The blood serum is not liquefied unless putrefactive bacteria contaminate the culture. A fresh tube can be inoculated with one of the little scales, and a new generation started. The scales gradually increase in size, and consist entirely of bacilli. In about three to four weeks the cultivation ceases to increase, and it is then necessary to inoculate a fresh tube. In liquid blood serum a film forms on the surface of the liquid, and is easily broken by agitation. In neutralised broth there is very little indication of success. When a triturated culture is added to the broth, a granular, sandy, whitish deposit collects’ at the bottom of the vessel, with indications of an increase in amount. Koch also tried nutrient agar-agar, which did not prove to be at Fic. 164.— Bacintus TUBERCULOSIS, FROM TUBERCULAR Sputum, x 2500. From Photo- graphs. 380 INFECTIVE DISEASES, BACILLUS TUBERCULOSIS. a c Fic. 165.—PUuRE-CULTIVATIONS ON GLYCERINE-AGAR FROM HuMAN TUBERCULAR Spurum. a, After six months’ growth. (Fifth sub-culture.) b and c, After ten months’ growth. (Fourth sub-cultures. ) TUBERCULOSIS. 381 all a favourable medium. Some increase took place, but there was no continuous growth over the inoculated area. Glycerine Agar-agar.—Nocard and Roux were among those who worked at the subject and confirmed Koch’s observations. Nocard attempted to get cultures of avian tuberculosis on blood serum to which peptone, salt, and cane sugar had been added. The results were more success- ful than with ordinary serum. But he encountered a difficulty in the rapid drying of the surface of the medium, which rendered the tubes unfit for use. It occurred to Nocard and Roux to obviate this by the addition of a hygroscopic agent, and accord- ingly they added sterilised glycerine. The result, which far exceeded their expectation, evidently was not solely attributable to the prevention of Fic. 167.—PURE-CULTI- VATION IN GLYCERINE AGAR-AGAR,—A SUB- CULTURE FROM A PURE- CULTURE IN GLYCERINE- MILK. In two months. desiccation. Following up their discovery, and being anxious to find he. 1G3—euaaeonme a medium more easily VATION IN GLYCERINE prepared than blood JAGUTEAA after ten months’ growth. serum, they added 6 to 8 per cent. of glycerine to ordinary nutrient agar-agar. The bacillus grew so abundantly in this mixture that a culture in fifteen days equalled in extent a culture on blood serum which was several weeks old. The bacillus was found to grow abundantly in veal broth, to which glycerine had been added in the proportion of 5 per cent., the bottom of the flask being covered in about three weeks with a flocculent deposit, having some resemblance to anthrax cultivations in liquid media. In beef broth, chicken broth, and in Cohn’s liquid, cultures were obtained after the addition of glycerine. Description of Cultivations on Glycerine Agar-agar.—the cultivations on the sloping surface of obliquely solidified glycerine agar- agar begin to appear in from four toysix days as very minute white colonies, These steadily increase in size, and either look moist and 382 INFECTIVE DISEASES. smooth, or, even at this early stage, appear dry and crinkled. According to the number of bacilli inoculated, the colonies will either remain isolated or coalesce and form a more or less continuous film. If the nutrient agar-agar has only recently been prepared, there is usually a quantity of liquid present, and the bacillus forms a white coating over the inoculated area and beyond it. The appearances are much more characteristic when this medium is, comparatively speaking, dry. A semi-transparent membranous growth develops, thickens, and assumes a characteristic lichenous appearance. Such a culture, examined with a pocket lens, resembles a model in wax in miniature of the folds of the gastric mucous ‘ membrane. In about six weeks to two months the culture has fully developed. In old cultures, especially when the individual colonies remain isolated, the appearance is very characteristic. Some cul- tures in appearance closely resemble cultivations on blood serum, The consistency of the growth depends upon the character of the soil and the age of the culture. When the medium is moist the growth is moist and viscous, but more often it is distinctly tallowy, and in old and dry cultures scaly and friable. Cultivations in Glycerine Broth.—In a few days minute flakes are visible, which steadily increase in size, and subside to the bottom of the flask, forming in time a very copious deposit. On shaking the flask, this deposit, which is extremely tenacious, rises in stringy masses, and gives an appearance which is more or less character- istic. If the flask is left undisturbed, a delicate veil-like film forms over the surface, which can be readily broken up by gentle agitation, forming flakes which gradually sink in the liquid. If undisturbed for several weeks this film increases in thickness, is irregularly fissured, and has more the appearance of masses of tallow floating on the surface. The growth also may be seen to extend up the side “_ of the flask above the liquid. Pasteur or Erlenmeyer flasks can be employed for these cultures. Solidified egg-albumin added to the glycerine broth seems to increase the amount of growth, which clings to the albumin, and waves to and fro in the liquid when the flask is gently shaken. The author has confirmed the observation of Nocard and Roux, that sub-cultures from glycerine agar-agar, or from glycerine broth, will give cultures in ordinary broth without glycerine. Ordinary broth with egg-albumin, and without glycerine, will also give a good growth when inoculated from previous sub- cultures, although the attempt to produce primary cultures in these media has hitherto failed. Cultivations in Glycerine-Milk, and other Media.—In milk the TUBERCULOSIS. 383 author found there was only a slight increase in the number of bacilli inoculated, but milk with glycerine in the proportion of 5 per cent. forms a more favourable medium. The author has also cultivated the bacillus on sterilised urine and glycerine, and ordinary nutrient gelatine with 5 per cent. of glycerine. On potato the growth of the bacillus is extremely slow. Beevor succeeded in obtaining cultures at the ordinary temperature of the room. Examination of Cultivations.—To examine the bacilli in these various preparations the author prefers to use Neelsen’s method, floating the cover-glasses for from five to ten minutes on warm carbolised fuchsine, and passing them through dilute sulphuric acid. In some cultures the bacilli are shorter and thicker than is commonly observed in human sputum, and they are for the most part without the beaded appearance. In old cultures on glycerine agar-agar the number of granular or beaded bacilli increases, and there are also numerous peculiar forms, There are bacilli, sometimes two or three times the length of an ordinary bacillus, provided with a club-shaped enlargement at one or both extremities, and in rare cases with lateral branches. They are no doubt identical with the bacilli with swollen extremities and the branched forms observed by Nocard and Roux. In milk the appearance is very striking, many bacilli attaining in old cultures a great length, and all are more uniformly beaded than in any other cultivations. Staining preparations by the method of Gram in all cases exaggerate this appearance. The important part played by the environment is shown by the morphological differences observed in artificial cultivation under varying conditions, and by the fact that by successive cultivation the bacillus can be educated to grow upon a medium which is un- suitable for obtaining primary cultures. Impression preparations of the growth of the bacillus on the surface of glycerine agar-agar in capsules show a tendency to the formation of serpentine colonies, composed of bundles of more or less parallel bacilli. Spore-formation.-_In old cultivations true spore-formation can readily be observed, both in stained and unstained preparations. In the latter case they are recognised in the form of one or two highly refractive bodies in individual bacilli. Toxic Products of Cultwres.—The poisonous substances found in cultures, and the composition and use of tuberculin, have already been described (p. 43). Inoculation Experiments.— A relatively small portion of a culti- 384 INFECTIVE DISEASES. vation inoculated into the subcutaneous tissue, into the peritoneal or pleural cavities, into the anterior chamber of the eye, or directly into the blood stream, produces after three or more weeks artificial tuberculosis in guinea-pigs and rabbits. Dogs and cats can also be infected by experimental inoculation. When a trace of tubercular virus is inserted subcutaneously in the thigh of a guinea-pig, in about a week or ten days a chain of enlarged glands will be easily felt in the vicinity of the seat of inoculation. This affords an unfailing test, which can be applied when there is difficulty in ascertaining by the microscope the presence of the bacilli in the material under examination. It also affords a valuable method for testing the effects of antiseptics on tubercular virus. The appearances observed at the autopsy are swollen lymphatic glands, in the neighbourhood of the inoculation, followed by softening and abscess ; enlargement of the spleen and liver, with formation of caseous tubercles ; and tubercular deposits in the lungs, bronchial glands, and peritoneum. After inoculation of the eye, grey tubercles appear on the iris, and undergo enlargement and caseation, followed by tuberculosis of the eyeball and organs generally. The bacilli appear to be the direct cause of tuberculosis, and the presence of the bacillus in the sputum of patients is a distinctive sign of the existence of this disease. The detection of the bacillus has, consequently, become a test which is constantly applied. The bacilli are found in all tubercular growths of man, monkeys, cattle (Perlsucht), birds, and many other animals, and in cases of artificial tuberculosis, in rabbits, guinea-pigs, cats, etc. In man the bacillus can be detected in the tissues, in the sputum, in the blood, and in the urine. Tuberculosis may also be produced by inhalation and feeding experiments. The channels of infection in man are also most probably the pulmonary and intestinal mucous membranes. The possibility of inoculation of skin wounds is open to doubt. The bacilli or their spores are inhaled from the air, or taken in with food. Morphologically identical bacilli have also been observed, but very sparsely, in sections of lupus. Meruops oF EXAMINING THE TUBERCLE BaciILuus. Numerous methods have been recommended for examining the tubercle bacillus. A few of these will be described, as many are only of historical interest, TUBERCULOSIS. 385 The Ziehl-Neelsen method is preferred by the author both for sections and cover-glass preparations. Koch's original method.—Cover-glass preparations or sections are laid in Koch’s solution (No. 23, ¢) for twenty-four hours, or for one hour if the solution is warmed to 40°C. Rinse in water ; immerse in a watery solution of vesuvin for two minutes ; rinse again in water, and examine ; or, after rinsing in water, treat with alcohol, clove-oil, and Canada balsam. Ehalich’s method.—Cover-glass preparations are allowed to float in a watch-glass, containing a solution of gentian-violet or fuchsine, added to aniline water. A saturated alcoholic solution of the dye is added till precipitation commences (10 ce. aniline water, and 10 to 20 drops of the colour solution). The cover-glasses are left in the solution for about half an hour ; then washed for a few seconds in strong nitric acid (one part commercial nitric acid to two of distilled water), and rinsed in distilled water. After-stain with vesuvin or methylene-blue, rinse in water, dry and preserve in Canada balsam. Ehrlich-Koch method. ° Saturated alcoholic solution of methyl-violet or fuchsine 11 Aniline water : : j 100 Absolute alcohol . : ; 10 Preparations are left for twelve hours in this solution (colouring of the cover-glass preparations can be expedited by warming the solution). Treat the preparations with (1 to 3) solution of nitric acid a few seconds. Wash in alcohol (60 per cent.) for a few minutes (cover-glass prepara- tions need only be rinsed a few times). After-stain with diluted solution of vesuvin or methylene-blue for a few minutes. Wash again in 60 per cent. alcohol, dehydrate in absolute alcohol. Clear with cedar-oil, mount in Canada balsam. Rindfleisch’s method.—Prepare a solution composed of Saturated alcoholic solution of fuchsine : 10 drops Aniline water . F : . 2 drams. Pour it into a watch-glass, and float the cover-glass ; warm the watch- glass over a spirit-lamp until steam rises. Remove it from the flame, and set it aside for five minutes. Take out the cover-glass, and transfer it for a few seconds to acidulated alcohol (two drops of nitric acid in a watch-glass full of alcohol). Wash in distilled water, dry, and preserve in balsam. After-stain, if necessary, with Bismarck-brown, or methylene- blue. Gibbcs’ method.— Cover-glass preparations are placed in Gibbes’ double- staining solution which has been warmed in a test-tube, and, as soon as steam rises, poured into a watch-glass. They are allowed to remain for five minutes, and then are washed in methylated spirit till no more colour comes away, dried in the air or over a spirit-lamp, and mounted i Canada balsam, If the sulution is used without warming, the cover-glasses 25 386 INFECTIVE DISEASES. must be left in it for an hour. Sections are treated on the same principles, but must be left in the solution for several hours. The crumpling of the sections by the action of nitric acid is avoided. Baumgarten’s method.—Cover-glass preparations of sputum are made as already described, and immersed in a very dilute solution of potash (1 to 2 drops of a 33 per cent. solution of potash in a watch-glass of dis- tilled water). The cover-glass is pressed down on a slide, and examined with a high power. The bacilli can be thus examined in the unstained condition, and to avoid any mistake from confusion with other species, the cover-glass can be removed, dried, passed through the flame, and stained with a drop of an aqueous solution of fuchsine, or gentian-violet. The putrefactive bacteria are stained, but the tubercle bacilli remain absolutely colourless. Baumgarten’s new method.—A solution is prepared as follows: Drop 4 to 5 drops of concentrated alcoholic methyl-violet solution into a small watch-glass full of water. (a) Stain the sections in this solution, wash them in water, and decolorise in absolute alcohol (five to ten minutes) ; or, before treating with alcohol, immerse the sections for five minutes in a half-saturated solution of carbonate of potash. Pass through clove-oil, and mount in a mixture of Canada balsam, free from chloroform, and clove-oil (equal parts). The object of this process is to differentiate the tubercle bacilli from chance bacteria, inasmuch as the tubercle bacilli are gradually decolorised by the clove-oil. (0) Sections stained in the above solution are placed for five minutes in alcohol, and then in a concentrated solution of Bismarck-brown in 1 per cent. solution of acetic acid. The after-treatment may be conducted as already described. _ Ziehl-Neelsen method.—Cover-glass preparations may be quickly stained in Neelsen’s solution warmed in a watch-glass till steam rises. Sections are left for from five to ten minutes in the solution, and then washed in a watery solution of sulphuric acid (25 per cent.), rinsed in distilled water, and immersed in methylene-blue solution. After two or three minutes they are passed through alcohol and oil of cloves, and mounted in Canada balsam. Frénkel’s method.—Sputum preparations are rapidly double-stained by the following method: Prepare a solution by adding concentrated alcoholic methyl-violet or fuchsine solution, drop by drop, till opalescence arises, to 5 ccm. of aniline-water heated to 100° OC. Float the prepared cover-glasses two minutes in the warmed solution. The process of after- staining and decolorisation is effected by placing the preparation for one to two minutes in one of the following solutions: for fuchsine-stained preparations, a saturated solution of methylene-blue in a mixture of Alcohol ; : 50 Distilled water : ; 30 Nitric acid : , : 20 which is filtered before use ; for preparations stained in methyl-violet, a saturated solution of vesuvin may be used in Alcohol , : 70 Nitric acid ‘ , : ; : ; 30 TUBERCULOSIS. 387 Ehrlich’s Method and Eosin.—The author has found that after sections have been stained with methyl-violet and Bismarck-brown by Ehrlich’s method, as described by Koch, they may with advantage be immersed in a weak alcoholic solution of eosin, then rinsed in clean absolute alcohol, clarified with clove-oil, and mounted in Canada balsam. The giant cells are then stained pink, while their nuclei are brown, and the bacilli blue. TUBERCULOSIS’ IN Man, The disease manifests itself in various forms in man, and most frequently in the lungs, producing phthisis or consumption. The sputum contains the bacilli in large numbers, and is extremely virulent. Scrofula and lupus are forms of tuberculosis; they are Fic. 168.--SecTION THROUGH A LUPUS NODULE OF THE Noss. probably produced by an attenuated variety of the tubercle bacillus. Lupus can be distinguished from tuberculosis of the skin; and scrofulous lymphatic glands are distinguished from tubercular glands by the tendency of the latter to produce generalised tuberculosis. This difference in the intensity of the virus in the two cases, Lingard illustrated by the effect upon inoculated guinea-pigs. Cavities in the lungs are often thickly lined with bacilli, They are present in great numbers in the caseous matter, though in equine and bovine tuberculosis this is not the case. Whether the disease in man is contagious is an open question, though numerous cases of supposed communication between husband and wife, brothers and sisters, have been reported, and Ransome 388 INFECTIVE DISEASES. showed that tubercle bacilli were present in the breath in phthisis, On the other hand, the experience in consumption hospitals does not Fic. 169.—Tupercutar ULceration ior Mucosa or Human Iteum. Between the ulcers there are tubercular lymph-follicles (Hamiuton). support this view, there being no evidence of the communication of the disease to nurses and hospital attendants, TUBERCULOSIS. 389 TUBERCULOSIS OF CATTLE. In cattle the disease may occur as the result of inhaling bacilli, or of ingestion with food. - It is very frequently found in the lungs; and calves may be infected by milk from cows with tubercular udders. Calves may also suffer from congenital tuberculosis, the bacilli having been transmitted from the mother during gestation. Breeding in-and-in, over-production of milk, and confinement with insanitary surroundings, predispose to tuberculosis. The disease is known in Germany as “ Perlsucht”; and in this country the lesions on the pleura are known as “grapes,” and the animals themselves are commonly called, “‘ wasters.” The disease may also exist in the lungs or in other organs, in a limited form, without any indication of ill health. In such cases the disease can be detected by injection of tuberculin, a marked rise of temperature occurring in tubercular animals. In advanced cases, the symptoms commonly observed Fc. 170. --SECTION OF Lurus OF THE SKIN, A é x 700. Giantcell containing a tubercle are cough, difficulty in breath- bacillus (FLUGGE). ing, staring coat, wasting, and diarrhea; and if the udder is infected, nodules in the gland, and thin bluish milk. In the lungs, after slaughter, a few small cheesy tubercles may be found in animals apparently in perfect health and in prime condition for the market. In advanced cases, the lungs on section show large yellow masses, containing calcified matter, and the bronchi may be full of yellowish pasty contents. The disease will be found to involve the bronchial glands. The serous membraue may be covered with little warts or grape-like masses. The lymphatic glands may be enlarged to an enormous size. Tubercular ulceration of the intestine is sometimes found, but not commonly. In tubercular disease in the udder, a painless swelling is found which may affect one or more quarters of the gland. Transmission of Tuberculosis from Man to Cattle.—It is 390 INFECTIVE DISEASES. for obvious reasons impossible to ascertain by experiment whether tuberculosis can be transmitted from cows to man by milk or other- wise; but some light may be thrown upon this important, question by ascertaining the result of inoculating bovines with human tuber- culosis. If calves can be infected with tuberculosis from a human source by inoculation or ingestion experiments, and especially if the effect of administering human and bovine tubercle to calves by these means is found to be the same, such experiments will not only serve to dispel any doubt there may be as to the identity of the two affections, but they will strengthen the hands of those Fic. 171.—Tusrrcu.osis or PLEURA; ‘‘GRAPE-DISEASE.” who insist upon the necessity of more thorough inspection of dairy cows, and of power to deal with tubercular animals. Inoculation of a Calf with Human Tubercular Sputum.—The author obtained sputum containing numerous bacilli from an advanced case of phthisis. The sputum was shaken up with sterilised salt solution and injected into the peritoneal cavity. A few weeks afterwards the calf showed signs of illness. The animal looked dull, did not feed well, had a slight cough, and showed less inclination to move about than usual. These symptoms gradually increased, and death occurred forty-two days after inoculation, Extensive lesions TUBERCULOSIS. 391 were discovered at the post-mortem examination. The mesentery was adherent to the abdominal wall, at the seat of the inoculation, and to the rumen ; the liver was adherent to the diaphragm. There was extensive tubercular deposit at the seat of inoculation, and an abscess the size of a walnut. Extending over the mesentery from this point there were hundreds of wartlike, fleshy, new growths, some quite irregular in form, others spherical or button-shaped. There were similar deposits on the under surface of the liver, on the spleen, in the gastro-splenic omentum, and on the peritoneal surface of the diaphragm. The spleen was adherent to the rumen, and on dissecting away the adhesions another abscess was opened. The lungs were congested and the pleure thickened. On microscopical examination of sections extremely minute tubercles were found to be disseminated throughout the whole of the substance of the lungs _and liver, and tubercle bacilli were found in these and in the peritoneal deposits. The abscesses contained Streptococcus pyogenes. The calf died of pyemia, but sufficient time had elapsed for marked local infection leading to generalised miliary tuberculosis. TuBERCULOSIS IN RELATION TO THE PusLic Mink SupPty. There is not the slightest doubt that when the udder is involved the milk is highly virulent to the lower animals, and presumably is, therefore, dangerous to man. The virulence of the milk was first insisted upon by Klencke in 1846, and confirmed by Gerlach in 1869, and later, by others. This subject was again brought forward with the discovery of the tubercle bacillus, and the demonstration of its existence in the milk in certain cases of bovine tuberculosis. Koch pointed out that the milk only contained bacilli, and was only infective, when the udder itself was tubercular. By this he explained the contradictory results obtained by various experimenters with milk from cows un- doubtedly suffering from “ Perlsucht.” Koch considered that positive effects were obtained with milk when it happened to contain tubercle bacilli, and negative with milk from which they were absent. Bang in a number of cases verified the presence of tubercle bacilli in milk, and, owing to the contradictory results of previous investigations, repeated the ingestion experiments. The milk was found to be virulent both to pigs and rabbits. In this country Woodhead and M‘Fadyean tested milk for tubercle bacilli. They examined six hundred cows in the Edinburgh dairies, and fonnd thirty-seven suffering from mamumitis, but in only 392 INFECTIVE DISEASES. six were they able to demonstrate the presence of tubercle bacilli in the milk, and then only in small numbers. Hirschberger found in twenty cases of tuberculosis in cattle that the milk of eleven was virulent to guinea-pigs. Three cows out of nine in which the disease was restricted to the lungs gave infected milk. On the other hand, Nocard inoculated milk from eleven tuberculous cows, of which only one had diseased udder, and only this one gave infective milk. Bang injected rabbits with milk from twenty-one cases of tuberculosis, with the udders apparently normal, and the milk was virulent in two. The author had two cases of udder tuberculosis under observation, and as no experiments had at the time been made in this country with milk known to contain tubercle bacilli, it was decided to study the effect on rabbits, and test the results obtained by Bang. These cases were both interesting and instructive, and may be referred to in detail. One was a case of advanced general tuberculosis. There was extreme emaciation, general apathy, and a peculiar dull expression of countenance. The skin was dry and harsh, the coat staring, and there was loss of hair in patches about the face and neck. There was dulness on percussion over a large area of the thorax, and the respirations were increased in rapidity. There was also occasional cough and some diarrhoea. But the most interesting condition was observed on examination of the udder. The gland was swollen, especially posteriorly, and distinct induration could be felt on examination. The deposit appeared to be more or less limited to the posterior quarters. The cow evinced no pain during the examination of the udder, not even on the application of firm pressure. The author took samples in test-tubes of the milk from all four teats ; when freshly drawn, it differed noticeably from the normal secretion. It was a thin, watery, turbid fluid with whitish flakes in suspension, but it was not gelatinous or muco-purulent in character, and was free from any markedly yellow colour. After being set aside in the laboratory for some hours it separated into a layer of cream and a turbid liquid of a yellowish tint, while at the bottom of the test-tube there was a whitish flocculent deposit, especially in the samples from the posterior quarters. There were tubercle bacilli both in the cream and in the deposit. In the cream they were only present in small numbers, and were detected, therefore, only after careful search. But in the deposit they were readily found, as in a cover-glass preparation there were sometimes four or five in the field of the microscope. The method adopted for the examination of this deposit was as follows: The whole of the liquid in the test-tube was carefully poured off, and a trace of the sediment spread out on a cover-glass. This was allowed to dry, and passed through the flame, and stained in hot Ziehl- Neelsen solution in the usual manner. TUBERCULOSIS. 393 The other cow was also a case of general tuberculosis, and presented somewhat similar lesions of the udder. The induration of the gland was readily detected, and examination of the milk showed, as in the previous case, the presence of tubercle bacilli. It will be observed that in neither of these cases was the disease limited to the udder ; in both the implication of the gland was part of general tuberculosis. Fre. 172.—Tusercutak ULCERATION OF THE INTESTINE OF a Cow. The first cow was killed, and the following lesions were found at the post-mortem examination. Thoraw.—The lungs and bronchial glands were extensively invaded with tubercular deposit. The glands were greatly enlarged and densely fibrous, in many cases with central, stone-like masses, grating on section against the edge of the knife. In the lung there was every stage, from the early deposit to purulent cavities, cheesy masses, and calcified débris. Abdomen.—There were a few caseous nodules in the liver, but none in the spleen. The mesenteric glands formed an almost continuous chain 394 INFECTIVE DISEASES. of large tumours, mostly with central cretification. Tubercular deposit in the intestines could be recognised from the outside, and on laying them open the mucous membrane was found to be studded with tuber- cular ulcers. These ulcers were most numerous in the large intestine, and varied in size from a sixpence to a florin. Some were circular, others slightly irregular in form, and others again distinctly oval. In the latter case they were generally situated with their long diameter transversely. The base of the ulcer involved the muscular coat, and was irregularly radiated. The margin was broad, and elevated above the general surface, producing a ring-like appearance. Mammary Gland.—The udder was infiltrated throughout with tuber- cular new growth, but the invasion was most marked in the posterior quarters. There was apparently very little tendency to caseation. Microscopical Examination of the Udder.—In order to study the histo- logical characters of the gland, and the distribution of the bacilli, sections were stained with logwood and rubin, and others again with fuchsine and methylene-blue, The tubercular new growth consisted of the usual histological elements, round cells, epithelioid cells, and giant cells. Healthy lobules here and there were sharply marked off from those in which the growth was compressing and obliterating the alveoli in its progress. Bacilli were present in the giant cells, and also distributed in vast numbers throughout the tubercular tissue generally. Bacilli were found in epithelioid cells close to the alveolus, and also between the cells lining the alveoli, In parts also the new growth had involved the milk ducts, and therefore it was easy to account for the presence of the bacilli in the milk. The bacilli were found in considerable numbers also in sections of the intestinal ulcers, EXPERIMENTAL INFECTION OF RABBITS. Ingestion.—A rabbit received the contents of a test-tube which had been filled with milk from one of the posterior teats, mixed with a small quantity of bran. In four weeks there was commencing emaciation ; later, diarrhoea set in, and death occurred exactly fifty- eight days after administration of the milk. At the post-mortem examination the mesenteric glands were found to be much enlarged and caseous. A cover-glass preparation from a crushed gland revealed numerous tubercle bacilli. On opening the intestines there was a patch of ulceration, showing the point of access of the bacilli. The intestinal ulceration was a reproduction, to a certain extent, of the condition in the cow which had been the source of the virus. Subcutaneous Injection.—A second rabbit was injected under the skin of the back by means of a capillary pipette with about ten drops of milk, including some of the deposit from the bottom of the test-tube. The sample of milk had in this case also been taken from DESCRIPTION OF PLATE XII. Tubercular Mamumitis. N Fig. 1.—From a section of the udder of a milch cow. The tubercular deposit is seen to invade the lobules of the gland. Lobules comparatively healthy are marked off, more or less sharply, from the diseased ones in which the new growth in its progress compresses and obliterates the alveoli. Stained by the Ziehl-Neelsen method and with methylene-blue. x 50. Fig. 2.—Part of the same preparation, On the right of the section part of a healthy lobule is seen. On the left a lobule is invaded by tubercular new growth composed of round cells, epithelioid cells and typical giant cells. Tubercle bacilli can be seen both singly and collected in groups. They are found in and between the cells, and in the interior of giant cells. Bacilli may be seen between the cells lining an alveolus and projecting into itslumen. x 800. nt Brooks, Day & Som Lith TUBERCULOSIS. 395 one of the posterior teats. The rabbit was placed in a separate hutch, and death from general tuberculosis occurred ninety-two days after inoculation. The diaphragm and mesentery were studded with tubercles the size of a pin’s head. The kidneys superficially showed whitish rounded nodules projecting above the surface. These were found on section to be continuous, with wedge-shaped deposits in the sub- stance of the kidney. The lungs presented a very striking appear- ance, being, in short, a mass of tubercular deposit; and the bronchial and tracheal glands were similarly affected. In sections of the kidney and lung the bacilli were present, but they were distributed irregularly ; in one part of a section it was difficult to detect a single bacillus, in other parts they were present in large numbers. The milk from the two cows, previously to their coming under observation, had been mixed with the general supply of a dairy. There is indeed ample evidence that, both in this and in other countries, the milk of tuberculous animals finds its way into the market. The question which naturally arises is the possi- bility of any manifestation of tuber- culosis in man, arising from the consumption of unboiled milk con- taining tubercle bacilli. We must admit that there is no direct Fic. 173.—TupercuLaR ULcERA- at! TION OF THE INTESTINE OF A RaBBit. evidence of the transmission tuberculosis by milk from cow to man; but this may arise from the difficulty in tracing such a source of infection, owing to the long time which elapses before symptoms manifest themselves in man. Yet, if milk be a source of infection, we should naturally expect that primary tuberculosis of the intestine would be by no means an uncommon manifestation of the disease; and this in the adult is not in accordance with clinical experience. Such an argument would tend to contra-indicate danger to adults; but, on the other hand, the possible danger to children has been rightly insisted upon by the earliest writers on this subject. Woodhead has recently stated that, from his experi- ence in two large hospitals, he has been much struck by the fact that, in children who had died from other diseases during the course of tubercular disease of the abdominal glands, there was frequently 396 INFECTIVE DISEASES. not any trace of tubercular disease in other parts; thus pointing to the intestine as the channel by which the bacillus made its way into the body. Woodhead also remarks that in a large number of cases Fic.’ 174. TUBERCULOSIS OF THE LUNGS. From a photograph of the lungs of a rabbit which had been injected sub- cutaneously with about ten drops of milk, including in suspension a small quantity of the deposit at the bottom of a sample of milk from a cow with tuberculosis of the udder. Death occurred from general tuberculosis ninety-two days afterwards. The appearance of the lungs was very striking. They were almost completely composed of tubercular deposit. The bronchial glands, as well as the tracheal, of which one is seen in the photograph, were also enlarged and caseous. There were tubercular deposits in the kidneys and other organs, and also at the seat of inoculation. of general tuberculosis, where the possibility of infection by the pulmonary passages was evidently excluded, the tubercular process TUBERCULOSIS. 397 appeared to have invaded the body by the intestinal canal. These facts, taken in connection with the occasional existence of tubercle bacilli in milk, went far to prove, in his opinion, that milk was a source of tubercular infection, especially to young children. From his own experiments and observations the author has drawn the following conclusions :— 1. Cows with tuberculosis of the udder are to be found in dairies in this country. 2. The milk of these cows is, as a rule, mixed with the general supply. 3. The milk in cases of udder tuberculosis contains tubercle bacilli. 4. Rabbits inoculated with, or fed upon, milk containing tubercle bacilli contract tuberculosis. 5. Direct evidence of transmission of tuberculosis by milk to man is wanting, but from the effect of such milk onthe lower animals it is reasonable to conclude, in the present state of our know- ledge, that there may be danger in using the milk of cows with tubercular udders, and therefore strict inspection of dairies should be enforced; and boiling of milk before use will, as a rule, be a wise, if not absolutely a necessary precaution. Bollinger has shown that the virulence of cow’s milk is reduced by dilution with water in the proportion of 1 in 40 and even of 1 in 100, and that therefore there would be much less danger in consuming tubercular milk which had been mixed with the milk of healthy cows, than there would be in taking it direct from the infected cow. This is a matter of scientific interest; but it would be no justification for a dairyman to mix the milk of a tubercular cow with milk of cows known to be healthy. The milk of cows suffering from tuberculosis should undoubtedly be rejected. TUBERCULOSIS AND THE Pusitic Meat Suppty. The question of the advisability of allowing the flesh of tuber- cular animals to be sold for food, especially when the disease exists in a very small degree, is a vexed one. Numerous experiments have been made upon the infectivity of the flesh of tubercular animals. Kastner inoculated the juice expressed from the flesh of tukercular cows, Sixteen guinea-pigs were unaffected after injection 398 INFECTIVE DISEASES. of 1 to 2 cc. into the peritoneal cavity. Nocard injected ten to twenty drops of the muscle juice of the hearts of tubercular cattle, in which the disease was well marked, and none of the guinea-pigs were infected. With juice of the muscles of the thigh derived from ten tubercular cows Nocard inoculated forty guinea-pigs, and one only showed signs of tubercle. Nocard concluded that if there was any danger in the flesh of tuberculous animals, it was the exception and not the rule. On the other hand, Chauveau and Arloing produced tuberculosis in two guinea-pigs out of ten inoculated with muscle juice from a tubercular steer. In 1890 a Royal Commission was appointed to investigate this subject, and the report was issued in 1895. Martin, on behalf of the Commission, tested the flesh of twenty-one tubercular cows. In two cases only was evidence obtained of the presence of the bacillus by inoculation of guinea-pigs. The flesh of eight cows affected with mild tuberculosis produced tubercle in one instance by inoculation, but the ingestion experiments were negative. The flesh of five cows severely affected with tubercle gave the disease in four cases, either by feeding or inoculation, but only one gave the disease both ways. Martin thought that some of the results were due to the butcher infecting the meat in the process of dressing the carcase, either by his hands or knives. Woodhead made a series of experiments to test the effects of roasting and boiling on the tubercular virus in meat. It was found that in boiling and roasting experiments, as ordinarily carried out in the kitchen, the temperature, however high it may be on the surface, seldom reaches 60° C. in the centre, except in the case of joints less than about six pounds in weight. Boiling and roasting were found insufficient to destroy tubercular virus enveloped in rolls of meat. The following were among the conclusions of the Commissioners :— We have obtained ample evidence that food derived from tuberculous animals can produce tuberculosis in healthy animals. The proportion of animals contracting tuberculosis after experimental use of such food is different in one and another class of animals; both carnivora and herbivora are susceptible, and the proportion is high in pigs. In the absence of direct experiments on human subjects, we infer that man also can acquire tuberculosis, by feeding upon materials derived from tuber- culous food-animals. The actual amount of tuberculous disease among certain classes of food-animals is so large as to afford to man frequent occasions for contracting tuberculous disease through his food. As to the proportion of tuberculosis acquired by man, through his food or through other means, we can form no definite opinion, but we think it probable that an TUBERCULOSIS. 399 appreciable part of the tuberculosis that affects man is obtained through his food. The circumstances and conditions with regard to the tuberculosis in the food-animal which lead to the production of tuberculosis in man are, ultimately, the presence of active tuberculous matter in the food taken from the animal, and consumed by the man in a raw or insufficiently cooked state. Tuberculous disease is observed most frequently in cattle and in swine. It is found far more frequently in cattle (full grown) than in calves; and with much greater frequency in cows kept in town cow- houses than in cattle bred for the express purpose of slaughter. Tuber- culous matter is but seldom found in the meat substance of the carcase ; it is principally found in the organs, membranes, and glands. There is reason to believe that tuberculous matter, when present in meat sold to the public, is more commonly due to the contamination of the surface of the meat with material derived from other diseased parts, than to disease of the meat itself. The same matter is found in the milk of cows when the udder has become invaded by tuberculous disease, and seldom or never when the udder is not diseased. Tuberculous matter in milk is exceptionally active in its operation upon animals fed either with the milk or with the dairy produce derived from it. No doubt the largest part of the tuberculosis which man obtains through his food is by means of milk containing tuberculous matter. Provided every part that is the seat of tuberculous matter can be avoided and destroyed, and provided care be taken to save from contami- nation by such matter the actual meat substance of a tuberculous animal, a great deal of meat from animals affected by tuberculosis may be eaten without risk to the consumer. Ordinary processes of cooking applied to meat which has got con- taminated on its surface are probably sufficient to destroy the harmful quality. They would not avail to render wholesome any piece of meat that contained tuberculous matter in its deeper_parts. In regard to milk we are aware of the preference by English people for drinking cow’s milk raw—a practice attended by danger, on account of possible contamination by pathogenic organisms. The boiling of milk, even for a moment, would probably be sufficient to remove the very dangerous quality of tuber- culous milk. TUBERCULOSIS IN EQUINES. Tuberculosis is not very common in the horse, but when it does occur, it is frequently mistaken for glanders. There may be miliary tuberculosis in the lungs, or nodules disseminated throughout the lungs, liver, spleen, and bones. In a number of cases investigated by Nocard, the disease commenced in the abdominal organs, and the affection of the lungs appeared to be secondary. The author has examined several cases of equine tuberculosis. In some cases 400 INFECTIVE DISEASES. the lungs were affected with the disease in a miliary form. The bacilli could not be distinguished from bacilli in sections of the bovine disease. Giant cells were extraordinarily numerous, and in many cases were densely packed with bacilli, so that they could be recog- nised en masse under a low power. The bacilli were also distributed in the tissue generally, but were much more numerous in the giant cells. TUBERCULOSIS IN Dogs. Peters described a case of tuberculosis in a pet dog, from eating sputum from a tubercular patient. This is said to be a not uncommon cause of canine tuberculosis. TUBERCULOSIS IN Cats. Nocard reported a case of tuberculosis in a cat from eating tuber- cular sputum. The abdominal organs were diseased. Bollinger has described two cases of miliary tuberculosis. M‘Fadyean also has described a case. The bacilli are very plentiful in the lung. A minute examination of the individual micro-organisms by the author did not reveal any distinctive character. TUBERCULOSIS IN SWINE. The author examined the tubercular liver of a pig. The pig was about six months old, and after suffermg from cough and emaciation, died. The liver had caseous nodules scattered throughout its substance, some the size of a pea, and others larger. Tubercle bacilli without distinctive characters were found on examination of sections; but it was in some parts of a preparation difficult to detect any bacilli, and in other parts there were not more than five or six in the field of the microscope. Tuberculosis in swine is said to be very rare in America. TUBERCULOSIS IN Brrps. Hens, guinea-fowls, turkeys, pheasants, and partridges, are sub- ject to tuberculosis, and ostriches and other birds kept in confinement may contract the disease. Tuberculosis in fowls appears to be introduced principally with the food, the disease occurring commonly in the intestines and liver. DESCRIPTION OF PLATE XIII. Tuberculosis in Swine. Section of liver of a pig with scattered tubercular nodules. Microscopica: sections of the liver showed tubercle bacilli in very small numbers. th a FD “‘OId AO AAAIT UVITINOY Sa. Tah. Be pec Loe re aa paper ie TUBERCULOSIS. 401 The author has examined several cases of so-called spontaneous tuberculosis in fowls. Sections of the liver were in one case remark- able on account of the extraordinary invasion of the caseous deposits with bacilli. Cover-glass preparations had been made from the liver in the following way for diagnostic purposes: A tubercle was readily picked out on the point of a scalpel and crushed between two slides, and the cover-glass preparations stained with the Ziehl- Neelsen solution. The bacilli are for the most part very small. A few attain a considerable length, but the majority are in the form of small, straight rods, with many sizes intervening between. these rods and isolated granules. In July 1888 the author received from Mr. Bland Sutton the liver and lungs of a Rhea, which had died in the Zoological Gardens. The lung was infiltrated with caseous deposits, and there were scattered caseous nodules in the liver varying in size from a pea to a marble. The naked-eye appearance of a section of the liver through these nodules, at once recalled to mind the naked-eye appearance of the deposits in the pig’s liver already described. But * whereas in microscopical preparations of the pig’s liver, bacilli were very scantily present, the sections of the lung and liver of the Rhea contained bacilli in such extraordinary numbers that, under a power of fifty diameters, the collections of bacilli could be recognised as red granular masses. These red masses under a high power were re- solved into dense colonies of bacilli. In their number and their distribution in the tissues, in their varying size, and in the extra- ordinary length of the longest forms, they presented very interesting points for observation. From the naked-eye appearance of the disease and the general microscopical characters, as well as the presence of bacilli agreeing in their staining reactions with the classical tubercle bacilli, the author had no hesitation in pronouncing the disease to be avian tuberculosis. Klein, who had examined a similar case, alluded to it in a description of leprosy; but this disease is unknown in the lower animals, and all attempts to infect them from man have been almost, if not entirely, negative. The bacilli in the Rhea are principally collected in the caseous parts, but they are also found in the tissue generally, and often collected in large cells. In size they vary toa marked extent. In the cells they often form compact masses of short bacilli, but in other parts, both in collections and singly, they attain a greater length than is observed in any other form of tuberculosis. Some of the bacilli present a very interesting appearance. They are provided 26 402 INFECTIVE DISEASES. terminally with a sharply defined ovoid body. There are also collections of short bacilli, many with these spore-like appearances. The author has also seen free ovoid forms, sometimes singly, some- times in groups. From their connection with the bacilli and their sharply defined outline they are very suggestive of spores. Johne examined the livers of a number of fowls accidentally infected by phthisical sputum. Nocard reported an outbreak in a poultry-yard where the man in charge had consumption. He also found the disease amongst fowls fed with the infected organs of tubercular cattle. Subcutaneous inoculation, and feeding of fowls with sputum or bovine virus, will produce the disease. Experimental inoculation of. tubercular virus from different sources affords an illustration of the different pathogenic effects obtained by varieties of the same species of bacillus. The bacillus of fowl-tuberculosis is a distinct variety. A very small proportion of guinea-pigs, inoculated in the peritoneal cavity with fowl-tubercle, succumb to the disease, though so susceptible to the effects of human or bovine virus. Maffucci maintains that guinea-pigs have an immunity, and that rabbits rarely develop a generalised tuberculosis. Cultures are not identical in appearance with those obtained from man, and on microscopical examination show many long, thick, and branched forms, which are only rarely found in cultures from a human source. Stamping-out System.—In 1888 a Departmental Committee was appointed to inquire into pleuro-pneumonia and tuberculosis, and they considered that legislation ought to be directed not only to the protection of cattle from tuberculosis, but also to prevent the possibility of the disease being communicated to man. The following extracts are from the recommendations of the Committee, which were made on the lines of :— A. PREVENTION. B. Exrirparion. A.—Preventive Measures. These should include provision for :— Improved hygiene of cattle sheds, etc. (especially in the direction of providing proper ventilation, pure water supply, and adequate disinfection of stalls, etc., wherein tubercular animals have been kept). This has been partly met in the Dairy and Milk Shops Order, but its administra- tion by the local health authorities is at present imperfect ; and we would suggest that it should be much more stringently enforced, and that veterinary inspectors should be given more extended powers of entry into all places where animals are kept. TUBERCULOSIS, 403. Improvement in the hygienic surroundings of animals should include isolation of all suspected cases, precautions against the flesh or milk of diseased animals being given as food to others—e.g., to pigs, fowls, etc.— and care that fodder, litter, and water should not be taken from one animal or stall and given to ‘annthen. Our attention has been drawn to the frequency with which animals,. obviously diseased, sometimes even in the last stage of the malady, are sold in open market. Although in England and Ireland, under the provisions of the Nuisances Removal Act as embodied in the Public Health Act, 1885, the medical officer of health or inspector of nuisances may seize such animals, yet such seizure is rarely performed. We find the veterinary inspector has no power to prevent such sales, or to seize the beasts for slaughter, since tuberculosis is not included in the Contagious Diseases (Animals) Act of 1878. We further find that there is actually a regular trade in such stock infected with tuberculosis, and that they go by the name of “ wasters” and “ mincers,” being frequently slaughtered in the neighbourhood of the larger towns, to which such portions of the meat as are likely to escape the observation of the inspector of nuisances are sent, for the purposes of sale among the poorer inhabitants, and especially for the making of sausages. We are, therefore, very strongly of opinion that power should be given to the veterinary inspector to seize all such animals in fairs, markets, or in transit. Notwithstanding the uniform prevalence of the disease in Europe and elsewhere, there seems to be no reason to apprehend that, with our present regulations for the slaughter of animals at the port of debarka- tion, and for quarantine of those imported for breeding, there is any special danger of increasing the infection in England by introduction from abroad. The danger, however, exists in regard to the stock brought from countries, which are exempt from slaughter on landing, and sub- jected to the ordinary veterinary inspection during the present period of detention of twelve hours. It is, therefore, evident that the present rules for the prevention of ‘the introduction of disease into the United Kingdom from abroad, are incomplete. Since all authorities are agreed that the disease is very marked by heredity, we think it highly desirable that breeders should in their own,, as well as in the public interest, discontinue breeding from tuberculous. stock. B.— Extirpation. In order to insure the gradual extirpation of tuberculosis, we are of opinion that it should be included in the Contagious Diseases (Animals) Acts for the purposes of certain sections of those Acts, so as to provide :— (a) For the slaughter of diseased animals, when found diseased on the owner’s premises. 404 INFECTIVE DISEASES. (b) For the payment of compensation for the slaughter of such animals, (c) For the seizure and slaughter of diseased animals exposed in fairs, markets, etc., and during transit. (d) For the seizure and slaughter of diseased foreign animals at the place of landing in this country. Notification of this disease should not be compulsory, because it may exist without developing any sufficient outward evidence to enable the owner to detect it, and its growth is so slow, that non-notification of its existence, even in a large number of cases, would do little to nullify the stamping-out effect of the Act of 1878. The powers and responsibilities of inspectors in ordering the slaughter of diseased animals should be the same for tuberculosis as for pleuro- pneumonia, according to section 51 (5) of the Act of 1878. Further, tubercle, though hereditary, is nevertheless much less conta- gious than the other diseases included under the Act of 1878, and it is clear, therefore, that the immediate slaughter of diseased animals would go far to stamp it out, though, doubtless owing to heredity, this stamping- out process would be gradual in its effect. A supplementary report was made by Professor Horsley, in which he expressed the opinion that there ought to be legislation to prevent breeding from diseased animals, and compulsory notifi- eation :— 1. Breeding. Tuberculosis is notorious, even among the laity, as a disease which is transmitted from parent to offspring. This is a fact with which cattle breeders are specially familiar, and which finds strong expression in the evidence attached to this report. Further, this generally received truth has been completely confirmed by the results of scientific investigation, as is also duly set forth in the report. Considering, therefore, the extreme importance of this point, I think that the act of wittingly breed- ing from animals so affected should be made an indictable offence. The only objection that can be raised to such legislation, which if effected would prevent the dissemination of the disease among cattle in this country, is that, owing to the present state of want of knowledge among cattle owners, and even veterinary surgeons, of the early symptoms, and physical signs on examination, of this disease, prosecutions would occa- sionally occur in cases in which no fault could properly be attributed to the owner, and that, therefore, such prosecutions would be needlessly vexatious. Considering, however, the extreme rarity with which such cases would occur, and that, as in the matter of non-notification, each case would be tried before district magistrates on its own merits, this objection is deprived of the force it might have possessed. _ TUBERCULOSIS. 405 2. Notification of the Existence of the Disease. This point requires no explanation, since it is clear that, unless the veterinary inspectors or authorities receive information of occurrence of diseases, it is impossible to ensure the thorough carrying out of the provisions of the Contagious Diseases (Animals) Act. That deliberate non-notification should be punished cannot be doubted by any one. Objection, however, to legislation in this direction has been put forward, on the same grounds as those upon which the prevention of breeding from diseased animals was contested. As, however, I consider that these objections have been already shown to have no weight, I recommend that both the forbiddance of breeding from diseased animals, and the notification of the disease, should be included in any legislation for tuberculosis. The difficulty referred to by the Committee, is presented by cases of the disease which cannot be detected by the ordinary methods of examination, and might possibly be overcome by the use of tuberculin as a diagnostic agent. CHAPTER XXIX. LEPROSY.—SYPHILIS.—RHINOSCLEROMA.— TRACHOMA, LEpRosyY. Leprosy occurs in three forms—tubercular, anesthetic, and mixed tubercular. It may be classed with the granulomata, as the most common form of the disease is characterised by deposits in the skin, mucous membrane, and internal organs. These deposits are composed of small cells, and large cells resembling giant cells. The cells become deposited in the surrounding tissues, and so the tubercle enlarges, involving the epidermis and developing into an ulcerating sore; or, after a certain stage of development, beginning to decline, and finally leaving a puffy discoloration. In the anesthetic form the cells invade the connective tissue of nerves. In the mixed form the varieties occur together, but the tubercular character predominates. Tubercular leprosy commences with the development of an erythematous patch, which becomes infiltrated, and finally tubercu- lated, the tubercles varying in size from a millet seed to a marble, or even larger. The eruption on the head and face produces a characteristic leonine expression. The progress of the disease is very slow. After death the following changes may be found in the internal organs: Cirrhosis of the liver and spleen, enlargement of the lymphatic glands, and a condition of the lungs corresponding to cheesy bronchial pneumonia. In the anesthetic form patches develop on the skin, which become anesthetic; ulceration follows, and the fingers and toes, or the entire hand and foot, may slough off. The disease is undoubtedly communicable, but the infectivity is of a very low type. The infectiousness is illustrated by the well-known case of Father Damien. Arning inoculated a man named Keanu, a condemnéd criminal, and leprosy developed three years afterwards, but this case 406 LEPROSY. 407 is not regarded as conclusive, as the man had a family history of leprosy. The disease has never been known to spread from patients in this country, who have contracted the disease abroad. The bacilli of leprosy were first observed by Hansen in 1874, and subsequently fully described by him, and his observations confirmed by Neisser, in 1879. Bacillus Lepree.—Rods 5 to 6 » in length and 1 » in breadth. The bacilli are straight or curved, resembling very closely the tubercle bacilli. They are present in the leprous tubercles of the skin and mucous membrane, in the lymphatic glands, and in the liver, testicles, and kidney; and in the nerves in the anzsthetic variety. They are found between the cells, and in colonies in the cells. They stain readily with the aniline dyes, especially by the Ziehl-Neelsen and Gram’s methods. The bacilli are found in extra- ordinary numbers in the skin, and they are rather straighter than tubercle bacilli, and stain more readily. Numerous unsuccessful attempts to cultivate the bacillus have been made by many bacteriologists. The author has made repeated inoculations upon glycerine-agar, upon which the tubercle bacillus grew abundantly, but always with disappointing results. On the other hand, Bordoni-Uffreduzzi showed the author a cultivation which he had obtained from the bone marrow of a leper. The cultivation was made on blood serum and glycerine, and cover- glass preparations resisted decolorisation with acid. There were slight morphological differences when compared with the appear- ance of bacillus lepre in the tissues, and the results were hardly conclusive. The English Leprosy Commission also reported successful cultiva- tion of the leprosy bacillus. The author had the opportunity of examining one of the first cultures received in this country, and found that the bacilli stained deeply in ordinary cover-glass pre- parations, they did not resist decolorisation by the Ziehl-Neelsen method, and they corresponded in culture with one of the varieties of Bacillus subtilis, commonly found on the skin. Inoculation of animals has given equally unsatisfactory results. Numerous experiments have been made by Beaven Rake on small animals and birds, with invariably negative results. The blood of leprous patients, tubercles from the living subject, fragments of the skin and of the internal organs after death, have been inoculated by different observers without result. Melcher and Ortmann alone claim to have produced really definite results. These observers excised leprous tubercles from the living subject, and inoculated fragments 408 INFECTIVE DISEASES. in the anterior chamber of the eye of rabbits. The animals died after some months with extensive deposits in the cecum, lymphatic glands, spleen, and lungs. These tubercles varied in size from a pin’s head to a millet seed, and contained bacilli, resembling leprosy bacilli in their staining reactions. The question naturally arises whether the lesions were really indicative of leprosy or tuberculosis. Until the experi- ments are independently confirmed, and the result of inoculation differentiated from tuberculosis, it would be rash to accept these experiments as conclusive. It has been suggested that tuberculosis and leprosy are identical. There is a similarity in the bacilli and in the lesions of leprosy and tuberculosis, the injection of tuberculin produces a reaction in leprosy nodules, and many lepers die from tubercular disease of the lung. But while tuberculosis is very readily transmitted to guinea-pigs and rabbits by inoculation of fragments of tubercular tissue, leprosy is inoculable, if at all, in most exceptional instances. The bacilli of tubercle are cultivated with the greatest facility, the bacilli of leprosy, if at all, only with exceptional difficulty; tubercle bacilli are found in giant cells, leprosy bacilli in the so-called leprosy cells. Leprosy bacilli are straighter than human tubercle bacilli, and differ slightly in their behaviour to staining reagents. On the other hand, the morphological differences are not greater than those existing between different forms of tubercle bacilli obtained from tuberculosis in animals and birds. It would be premature to regard leprosy as a variety of tubercle until cultivations of the bacillus have been obtained, and carefully compared with those of the tubercle bacillus. Differences in morphological details and results of inoculation would then carry less weight as a means of differentiation. The tubercular pneumonia of lepers would be regarded, if the bacilli are identical, as a development of leprosy in the lungs, and not, as at present, a result of double infection with tuberculosis. Mernops or Examinine tHe Bacitius oF LEpRosy. Cover-glass preparations may be made in the ordinary way, or by a special method, which consists in clamping a nodule with a pile clamp. until a state of anemia of the tissue is produced. On pricking with a needle or sharp knife a drop of clear liquid exudes, from which cover- glass preparations may be made, and stained by Neelsen’s method. For sections the author prefers Neelsen’s method and methylene-blue. They can also be stained by Gram’s method, which, as a rule, brings out very clearly the beaded appearance of the bacilli. DESCRIPTION OF PLATE XIV. Bacillus Lepr. Fic. 1.—From a section of the skin of a leper. The section is, almost in its entirety, stained red, and, with moderate amplification, has a finely granular appearance. Stained by the Ziehl-Neelsen method (carbolised fuchsine and methylene-blue). x 200. Fie. 2.—Part of the same preparation with high amplification, showing that the appearances described above are due entirely to an invasion of the tissue by the bacilli of leprosy. x 1500. Plate XIV. BACILLUS LEPRZ LEPROSY. 409: Method of Babes.—Preparations are stained in rosaniline hydrochlorate in aniline water, decolorised in 33 per cent. hydrochloric acid, and after- stained with methylene-blue. Stamping-out System.—The history of leprosy in the British Islands during the Middle Ages, and the conditions under which it both increased and declined, have been discussed by several writers. A large number of institutions of a charitable and ecclesiastical character were established in endemic areas and were occupied by the lepers either voluntarily, or compulsorily by means of the Act De leproso amovendo. These institutions were to a very small extent a means of segregation. According to Dr. Newman the disease, which had reached its zenith about the twelfth or thirteenth century, began to decline from that time owing to “a general and extensive social improvement in the life of the people, to a complete change in the poor and insufficient diet (which it is evident consisted far too largely of bad meat, salt, putrid and dried fish, and an almost entire lack of vegetables) and to agricultural advancement, improved sanitation and land drainage.” Of all the unfavourable conditions it would appear that food in some way was especially associated with the cause of the disease, either by introducing the bacillus or by rendering the tissues a suitable soil for its reception and development. In other countries segregation has been attempted voluntarily or compulsorily, but it has never been completely carried out. There can be very little doubt that the presence of a leper in a healthy community is no greater source of danger than the presence of an individual suffering from tuberculosis, but, for other reasons, voluntary isolation should be carried out as completely as local circumstances will permit. The Leprosy Commission in India recommended— (a) That the sale of articles of food and drink by lepers should be prohibited, and that lepers should be prevented from following certain specified occupations. (6) That the concentration of lepers in towns should be discouraged. (c) That Leper Asylums should be established in which lepers might live voluntarily. (d) That Leper Farms scattered over the country should be encouraged. (e) That the few children who are born of lepers should be removed to Orphanages. They concluded that by means of improved sanitation and good dietetic conditions a diminution of leprosy will result. ‘ 410 INFECTIVE DISEASES. SYPHILIS. Syphilis is a disease peculiar to man, and communicable ouly by inoculation. The local infection is followed by a period of latency, and by a period during which generalised eruptions appear. One attack confers immunity from future attacks. The virus in its most virulent form is found in the primary seat of inoculation, and in the indurated glands which follow. It is also supposed to be ' present in the blood and secretions. Lustgarten, Eve and Lingard have found bacteria which they believed to be specific. Bacillus in Syphilis (Lustgar- ten).—Rods resembling the bacilli of leprosy and tuberculosis, 3 to 4 p Fic. 175. — CovER-GLASS PREPARA- TION OF Pus FROM A CHANORE, X long, “8 p thick. ; Two or more 1050 (LUSTGARTEN). colourless, ovoid points in the course of the rod are visible with a high power; it is thought that possibly they are spores. The bacilli are always found in the interior of nucleated cells, which are more than double the size of leucocytes. They have been ob- served in the discharge of the primary lesion, and in tertiary gummata. Alvarez and Tavel state that an identical bacillus is found in normal secretions (smegma). Eve and Lingard have described a bacil- lus associated with specific lesions, which differs from the above in its morphology and behaviour towards Fic. 176.—WanprRING CELL con- TAINING BaciLi1 (LUSTGARTEN). staining reagents. Meruops oF Srarning THE Bacituus oF SYPHILIS. Method of Lustgarten :— Sections are placed for twelve to twenty-four hours in the following solution, at the ordinary temperature of the room, and finally the solution is warmed for two hours at 60° C. :— Concentrated alcoholic solution of gentian-violet . 11 Aniline water . ; ‘ F : : 100 SYPHILIS. All The sections are then placed for a few minutes in absolute alcohol, and from this transferred to a 1:5 per cent. solution of permanganate of potash. After ten minutes they are immersed for a moment in a pure concentrated solution of sulphurous acid. If the section is not completely decolorised, immersion in the alcohol and in the acid bath must be repeated three or four times. The sections are finally dehydrated with absolute alcohol, cleared with clove-oil, and mounted in Canada balsam. By this method the bacillus is distinguished from many bacteria, but not from the bacilli of tubercle and leprosy which are stained by this process. Method of De Giacomi :— Cover-glass preparations are stained with hot solution of fuchsine containing a few drops of perchloride of iron. They are then decolorised in strong perchloride of iron, and after-stained with vesuvin or Bismarck- brown. Method of Doutrelepont and Schiitz :— Sections are stained in a weak aqueous solution of gentian-violet and after-stained with safranin. The nature of the contagium in syphilis is unknown. Protective Inoculation.—Incculation of the virus, or syphilisa- tion, as a protective measure, was at one time practised and strongly advocated; but it is rightly regarded in this country as dangerous and unjustifiable. From the experiments of Ricord it would appear that the local results in the vesicular stage resemble the results of the inoculation of virulent vaccinogenic grease or horse-pox. The inoculation goes through the stages of papule, vesicle, ulcer, scab, and scar. The accidental inoculation which occurs in cases of vaccino-syphilis may so closely resemble the results of inoculation with very virulent cow-pox, that it is sometimes difficult to decide as to the exact nature of these cases. RAINOSCLEROMA. Rhinoscleroma is a rare disease, resembling lupus, and pro- ducing in the nostrils and neighbouring parts nodular swellings, composed of granulation-tissue. The disease is met with in America, Egypt, Austria, and Italy. There are no giant cells, but peculiar large cells, which were first described by Mikulicz. Frisch discovered bacteria in sections, and Cornil and Alvarez pointed out the existence of a capsule. In morphology and cultivation they resemble, according to Dittrich, Friedlander’s pneumococcus. They are probably identical with this micro-organism, and Paltauf and Eiselsberg, and others, found that they produced septicemia in rabbits and guinea-pigs. Bacterium of Rhinoscleroma (Bacillus of Rhinoscleroma, 412 INFECTIVE DISEASES. Cornil and Alvarez).—Cocci and short rods, 15 to 3 yw in length, ‘5 to ‘8 p thick. Deeply coloured points or granules may occur in the course of the rods when stained, but it is very doubtful whether these can be considered as spores. The bacteria are en- capsuled, the capsule being round when enclosing a coccus, and ovoid when enclosing a rod. The capsule is composed of a tough resisting substance; two or more capsules may unite by fusion, enclosing two, three, or a greater number of rods. The bacilli were observed in sections of the tumours, which developed on the lips and in the nasal and pharyngo-laryngeal regions. Mernop or Stainine THE BactLius oF Ruaino-ScLERoMmA. Methad of Cornil and Alvarez :— Sections are immersed in a solution of methyl-violet (B) for twenty- four to forty-eight hours, with or without the addition of aniline-water ; and are then decolorised after treatment with the solution of iodine in iodide of potassium. If the sections are left to decolorise in alcohol for forty-eight hours, the capsule is rendered visible. TRACHOMA. Trachoma is a disease of the conjunctiva, common in Egypt. The new growth is composed of round cells, and may be regarded, according to Kartulis, as the chronic stage of either gonorrheeal or Egyptian ophthalmia. Koch failed to find any micro-organisms in the swollen lymph follicles. Sattler asserted that he had culti- vated a micrococcus which produced the disease when inoculated on the conjunctiva, Other observers have found the common pyogenic micrococci in the secretions, especially Staphylococcus pyogenes aureus and albus. CHAPTER XXX. ACTINOMYCOSIS.—MADURA DISEASE. ACTINOMYCOSIS. Actinomycosis belongs to the class of infective granulomata. It is a chronic inflammatory affection characterised by the presence of a special microphyte, which by irritation produces a neoplasm, composed of round cells, epithelioid cells, giant cells, and fibrous tissue. These neoplasms form nodular tumours of various sizes. In some cases there is a tendency to develop very large tumours, and in others to break down early and suppurate. In cattle, cretification takes place in the fungus tufts. Actinomycosis closely resembles tuber- culosis in its histological characters. The disease attacks man, horses, cattle, and pigs. Many interesting observations have been made upon the origin of this disease in man. Two cases have been recorded in support of the theory of direct infection from the cow. Stelzner described a case of actinomycosis in a man who had had the care of animals, some of which had suppurating glands. Hacker had a case of actinomycosis of the tongue in a man who had charge of cows, one of which had a tumour of the jaw which he had opened. On the other hand, Moosbrugger found that out of 75 cases, 54 were in men, and 21 in women, including 2 children. In 11 of these men the occupation was not stated. In 33 their occupation did not bring them into contact with diseased animals; they were, for example, millers, glaziers, tailors, shop people, and students. Only 10 cases occurred among farmers, peasants, and farm-labourers, and in only one case out of the 10, had the patient been brought into contact with diseased animals. Out of the 21 women, there were only 4 peasants, and none of them had been associated with diseased cattle. Infection by the flesh of diseased animals has also been dis- cussed. But there is no evidence of prevalence of the disease 413 414 INFECTIVE DISEASES. among slaughterers and butchers, who would be particularly liable to it, if flesh were a source of infection. The chances of infection by ingestion are minimised by the flesh being almost always cooked. Actinomycosis occurs also in pigs, and pork is very often eaten in an uncooked state; but Israél has pointed out that this may probably be excluded, as many of the cases occurred among strict Jews. The evidence points to the disease originating in man and lower animals from the same source, and there is a very strong suspicion attached to cereals. This view is supported by important obser- vations, with reference to the part played by cereals in inducing the disease in cattle, and it gains additional support from a case described by Soltmann, where the disease resulted from an awn of wall barley. A boy, aged eleven, accidentally swallowed an awn of Hordeum murinum. He became very ill, and suffered great pain behind the sternum, extending to the back. An abscess formed, covering an area extending over six intercostal spaces, and when opened, the awn of this grass was found in the evacuated pus. The pain, however, continued, and fresh deposits occurred, and when the boy was taken to the hospital, the ray-fungus was detected. Possibly the spores of the fungus can be conveyed both by air and water. This disease in cattle has long been known in this country, but. its various manifestations were either mistaken for other diseases, or simply received popular names. Indeed, the various forms are still familiar to many as wens, clyers or crewels, scrofulous, tuber- cular or strumous abscesses, polypus, lymphoma, cancer of the tongue, scirrhous tongue, indurated tongue, ulcerated tongue, cancer of bone, bone tubercle, osteo-sarcoma, fibroplastic degeneration of bone, spina ventosa, and carcinoma. Bovine antinomycosis is especially prevalent in river valleys, marshes, and on land reclaimed from the sea. The disease occurs. at all times of the year, but general experience leads to the belief that it occurs more commonly in the winter. It is more frequently met with in young animals, and usually occurs between one and three years, but it may be found at almost any age, and probably affects equally both sexes. There is little if any evidence to show that the disease is heredi- tary. In numerous cases, the family history has been most carefully inquired into by the author; and in the case of some imported pedigree animals, the disease was quite unknown on the farm where they had been bred. The tongue is so commonly the seat of the disease, that suspicion. ACTINOMYCOSIS. 415 at once falls on food as the means by which the parasite is conveyed. Skin wounds produced by rubbing against the mangers, posts, or wire fencing, may also become infected. The evidence is very strong in favour of believing that the micro- organism gains access to the system through wounds or lacerations of the mucous membrane and skin, or through carious teeth. It has been pointed out that the common occurrence of the disease at the time of the second dentition may be owing to the wounds produced in the alveolar mucous membrane by the shedding of the teeth. Experience also points to straw being sometimes a factor in the production of the disease, and it is possible that thistles and frozen roots also, by wounding the mucous membrane, may afford a way for the entrance of the micro-organism. The disease in the jaws, both in man and in cattle, is very commonly associated with carious teeth. The cowsheds, pastures, and drinking tanks may become infected with the discharges from diseased animals. The discharge con- taminates the fodder in the sheds, and falls on thistles and siliceous grasses in the pasture, which may first wound, and then introduce the micro-organism. The discharge is also coughed out of the mouth, and expelled from the nose, in cases in which a tumour in the pharynx, or the nasal chambers, has undergone suppuration. Jensen believed that the disease was produced by different kinds of grain, especially when cultivated on ground reclaimed from the sea. He mentions an instance of a farm, where nearly the whole of the young stock, about thirty in number, had actinomycosis after feeding on mixed forage, grown on a certain field. Two years after- wards the same disease occurred in the same stalls in four animals, after being fed on barley-straw from the same field. According to Jensen, the fungus grows on grain, husks, and straw of different cereals, but most abundantly on barley, which is also the most likely to wound the mucous membrane. Johne’s observations tend to corroborate this view, for in twenty-two out of twenty-four cases in which he found barley sticking in the tonsils of pigs, he found the beard thickly beset with a fungus very similar to, if not identical with, the ray-fungus: These observations are of great interest in connection with Soltmann’s case. Experience points to the belief that the disease is not readily communicable from animal to animal, and it is possible that when it affects a large number of cattle in a herd, the same causes have been acting to produce the disease in a number, which in another instance may only produce it in one. At the same time, isolated 416 INFECTIVE DISEASES. cases are possibly not quite so common as they are reported to be. It is well known that, as a rule, the services of a veterinary surgeon are not called for except in hopeless or very severe cases. The cowmen themselves, in many districts, treat the cows successfully, and then send them into the market, and thus the existence of previous cases may not have come to the knowledge of the veterinary surgeon. Historical.—In 1845 Professor von Langenbeck, of Kiel, made notes of a ease of vertebral caries in a man, and prepared drawings of peculiar bodies in the pus from an abscess. The drawings were published together with a reference to the case by Israél in 1878. There can be little doubt that these structures were the fungi of actinomycosis. But the first to publish observations was Lebert in 1848, Lebert received from M. Louis some pus, of a thick, almost gelatinous consistency, which had been obtained from an abscess of the thoracic wall in a man aged fifty. The patient had been attacked four months previously by a pulmonary affection, which was suspected by M. Louis to be cancerous in nature. The pus contained a very considerable number of little spherical bodies of a slightly greenish-yellow colour, about the size of a pin’s head. They could be readily crushed between two strips of glass, and on examination with a power of fifty diameters two elements could be distinguished: a soft connective substance, and many hard, narrow, wedge-shaped corpuscles, arranged in a radiating manner. Under a high power these bodies were observed to be 2, to 4, of an inch in length, y§> in width at the base, and ;1, in width at the apex. Some of these corpuscles were regular, while others showed one or two constrictions, with intermediate flask-shaped swellings. Lebert tested these structures with reagents, with the following results. The bodies were found to remain unaltered by concentrated mineral acids. Acetic acid freed them . from foreign elements adhering to their surface. Solution of caustic potash did not affect them if used cold, but a boiling solution reduced the cuneiform structures to a fine greyish powder without dissolving them. Ether, alcohol, and chloroform had no effect upon them when used either hot or cold. Solution of potash, in which these bodies had been heated, mixed with a solution of sulphate of copper and brought to boiling point, did not offer any uniform red colour, which would have been the case if they had contained albumin. Thus, the chief chemical characters of albuminous and fatty substances were wanting, and they resembled chitine in their behaviour to reagents. ACTINOMYCOSIS. 417 Lebert bore in mind the possible existence of some helminthic débris, of which these bodies might be hooklets, but he sought in vain for echinococci and cysticerci. Actinomycotic pus was later described and figured by Robin. In the illustration accompanying the description, the fungi are most Fic. 177.—Srction or Liver rrom A CAsE OF ACTINOMYCOSIS 1N Man. accurately depicted. Robin states that he had found, in two or three cases in the pus of deep-seated chronic abscesses, yellowish grains attaining a diameter of one-tenth of a mm., surrounded by a sort of halo or thin, viscous, finely granular stratum, containing leucocytes. These rains were composed of elements 2 to 6 mm. in length, swollen 5 te) 27 2 A18 INFECTIVE DISEASES. at one end and tapering off at the other, arranged in a regular series, radiating from a common centre which consisted of granular matter, ‘They were highly refractive, possessed a brilliant centre and sharply defined outline ; they were dissolved, or at least rendered indistinct, by acetic acid, and proved insoluble in ammonia and ether. The disease in man was next described by Israél in the paper mentioned above. Ponfick was the first to clearly recognise the identity of the disease in man with the disease in cattle, and he described a number of cases in man. Israél subsequently published a work on the subject. The various cases which had been observed up to that date were described, and the disease classified according to the seat of invasion. From this time onwards numbers of cases in man have been described, and various important researches published, of which those of Bostrém and Moosbrugger may be especially mentioned. In England, Acland recognised a case on examining the liver after death (Fig. 177). H. Taylor was the first,.in this country, to detect the fungus during the life of a patient. Shattock found Specimens of the disease in museums. Skerrit, Powell and Godlee, Eve, Delepine, Ransome, Poore, Malcolm Morris and others have published cases. In Italy, Perroncito studied the sarcomata of cattle, and claims to have first observed the micro-organism in 1863. In 1875 he described it in the Encyclopedia Agraria, and, from the negative results obtained by inoculation experiments, was led to regard it, not as the cause, but as a result of the disease. Rivolta of Turin also claims to have been the first to have ‘discovered the fungus in actinomycosis bovis. As early as 1868 he published a paper on a sarcomatous tumour of the jaw of an OX, Hahn of Munich, in 1870, undoubtedly met with the fungus, for he states that in a case of “‘ wooden-tongue ” he found characteristic organised structures, which he provisionally described as a species of mould fungus. Bollinger was the first to recognise the nature of this disease in cattle. In 1876 he pointed out that new growths occasionally occurred on the upper and lower jaws of cattle, which either started from the alveoli of the back teeth, or from the spongy tissue of the bone, and by increasing in size loosened the teeth. In their progress they destroyed bone, muscles, mucous membrane, and skin. After ‘some time they frequently broke down, forming ulcers, abscesses, and fistule ; but in some cases tumours were formed, which attained ACTINOMYCOSIS. 419 the size of a child’s head. Bollinger stated that this disease had been known by various names,—Osteosarkome, Winddorn (Spina ventosa), Knochenkrebs, Knochenwurm ; in other instances it had been regarded as bone tuberculosis, or mistaken for a simple chronic glossitis. Among breeders of cattle and owners of stock in Germany it had been known under the following names: Ladendruck, Laden- geschwulst, dicker Backen, Backel, Kinnbeule, Kiefergeschwulst, etc. Bollinger pointed out that these swellings ‘consisted of several centres of growth, bound together by connective tissue. They were often as large as a walnut or a hen’s egg, and of a pale yellow colour and moist appearance. The cut surface presented yellowish- white, suppurative foci, while in other cases the growths had a spongy texture, owing to the formation of lacune or hollow spaces in a fibrous stroma, which contained a turbid, thick, yellow, caseous pulp. Microscopical examination of the tumour showed that it had a structure like a sarcoma, while the squeezed-out pulp consisted principally of pus cells, granulation cells, fat granules, and granular detritus. In addition, there were numerous opaque, pale-yellow, and coarsely granular bodies of different sizes, which had a mulberry- like appearance, and were sometimes encrusted with chalk. After careful examination Bollinger found that these bodies were true fungi, and he further maintained, from the constancy of their appearance in all parts of the sarcomatous growth, that they were not accidental, but of pathogenic significance. This was found to be the case, not only in fresh preparations, but in old specimens preserved in the museum. This remarkable form of mycosis was observed by Bollinger, not only in the upper and lower jaws, but also in the tongue. It had long been observed that the tongue was sometimes covered with more or less tubercular growths, scattered abundantly over the surface of the mucous membrane, mostly the size of a millet seed or hemp seed, but often reaching the size of a cherry or walnut, or even larger. In the fresh state these nodules were greyish-white, and semi-transparent, but they soon became cloudy or distinctly puriform in the centre; they were surrounded externally with a connective tissue capsule. If the nodules were situated on the surface of the tongue, destruction of the mucous membrane very readily followed, leading to the formation of ulcers. The tongue also might become affected with an interstitial glossitis, which often, in spite of the partial atrophy of the muscular fibres, led to a great enlargement and wood-like hardness of the tongue. On account of this peculiar character, such a tongue was long known in South 420 INFECTIVE DISEASES. Germany as Holzzwnge. In other cases the condition was regarded as “tubercle of the tongue,” “ chronic sarcoma,” “ chronic interstitial glossitis,” or simply “degeneration of the tongue.” Bollinger described this disease as occurring in cattle of all ages, developing itself gradually, and being always incurable. As a rule, the animals were slaughtered, because the diminished mobility and enlargement of the tongue interfered with feeding. He also pointed out that this disease of the tongue was by no means rare, as he had had no less than six such tongues from different parts of Bavaria in the space of a year, and he also had been able to prove the existence of the disease in museum specimens. On further continuing his researches, Bollinger found the same fungus in tumours which occurred in the pharynx, larynx, and the mucous membrane of the stomach. These tumours were very common in the throat in some parts of North Germany, where as many as 5 per cent. of the animals had been known to be affected. The disease frequently occurred in the form of subcutaneous neoplasms, called Lymphome, Hohzgeschwiilste, Fibrome, Tuberkel, Tuberkel-scropheln. This disease also appeared in the form of abscesses, which were called, in many districts, Schlundbeulen. These growths were found in the neighbourhood of the parotid gland, the larynx, and pharynx, and were similar in every respect to the affection of the jaw. They were described as starting apparently from lymphatic vessels in these parts. Bollinger discovered the fungus in a case of so-called fibroid of the second stomach of a cow, a spongy growth nearly the size of the fist; and he believed that in another case the disease manifested itself in the form of tubercular ulceration of the intestines. Bollinger submitted the fungus to Dr. Harz, a botanist, who described the fungi as mulberry-like masses from -5 to 1 mm. in diameter. They appeared to the naked-eye as opaque, white grains, and when calcified were difficult to recognise. On slight pressure the tufts of the fungi fell apart into segments of unequal size, each of which appeared to correspond to an individual fungus. The latter was described as beginning at the pointed end of the wedge, with a somewhat cone-shaped basal cell, which, in the absence of a mycelium, perhaps took its place, and bore a great number of short linked hyphe. At the ends of the hyphe there were oval, globular, or elongated club-shaped bodies, the reproductive cells or gonidia. Cultivation experiments, and inoculation of the tongue of a calf with liquid containing the micro-organism, failed. Harz proposed ACTINOMYCOSIS, 42] to call the fungus, from its ray-like appearance, actinomyces ; but what the position of the fungus in nature might be, was difficult to determine. It did not, he believed, belong to the yeast fungi, but to the mould fungi, and might be compared to Botrytis, Monosporium, and Polyactis. Bollinger concluded that there could be no doubt that actino- mycosis occupied an important position in the pathology of cattle diseases. As further evidence of the prevalence of the affection, he remarked that Zippelius of Obernburg had observed in the course of about ten years’ practice not Jess than 254 cases of lymphoma, in the neighbourhood of the larynx and pharynx, besides 157 cases of disease of the jaw; and Bollinger says that he had very little doubt that the greater part of the former, and very likely all the cases in the jaw, were due to the fungus which he had discovered. Tn certain parts of Franconia, according to a communication received from Professor Frank, these tumours of the throat were extremely abundant in cattle. Bollinger’s researches were followed by those of Siedamgrotzky, and later by a communication from Johne. Johne described the various forms of the disease which had up to that date been recognised, including a description of actinomycosis of the ‘bones of the jaws, of the fauces, of the larynx, of the cesophagus, of the stomach and intestinal canal, and of the udder. He carried outa series of experiments, by which it was clearly established that the disease could be communicated from cattle to cattle. Previously Bollinger, Harz, Perroncito, Ponfick, Siedamgrotzky, and Johne had failed, but subsequently by employing fresh material from the living animal, both Johne and Ponfick succeeded. Siedamgrotzky not only confirmed Bollinger’s researches, but he described the presence of the fungus in so-called ‘‘ multiple sarcomas ” of the mucous membrane of the esophagus. Rabé described the presence of the fungus in tumours known as Winddorn, and pointed out that, in at least one case, he considered that the disease had been carried by the lymphatics. There were eleven subcutaneous tumours in a row on the face, which were connected by swollen, rope-like, lymphatic vessels. They appeared to be secondary to a growth on the nostril, the size of a hen’s egg. Perroncito described a case of ‘‘sarcoma” of the intestines and stomach, which proved to be actinomycosis. Many additional communications were made on the subject of this disease. Ponfick produced it in the lungs by intravenous injection, and subsequently three cases occurring naturally in the 422 INFECTIVE DISEASES. practice of veterinary surgeons were published. They not only deserve especial mention, but as this form of the disease appears to be so seldom recognised, they will be given in detail. Plug described a case in the lungs. The cow had been out of health for four weeks, did not eat, and had a cough, and two days previous to the visit had become rapidly worse. Schmidt found dyspnea with abdominal respiration ; the nostrils were dilated, ‘the head protruded, and the mouth kept open. There was dulness on percussion, and crepitation. The animal was killed, and the lungs, which alone were diseased, were sent to Plug. The pleura on exami- nation was normal, but beneath it were numbers of miliary tubercles, many equal in size to a pin’s head. On section the lung had a granular appearance from the presence of countless numbers of minute deposits, which all had the appearance of grey tubercles ; in none was there any central softening. They were present in enormous numbers around the bronchi, and in the vessels of the interlobular tissue. Microscopical examination showed, in the middle of most of these nodules, the presence of greenish-yellow, radiating bodies, which under a high power appeared to be undoubtedly actinomycotic granules. In many there were only rudimentary fungi consisting of four or five clubs; there was only one rosette in each tubercle. The fungus was surrounded by round cells and fibrous tissue. Larger nodules resulted from the agglomeration of several tubercles, or from diffuse infiltration of round cells in the neighbour- hood of a tubercle. Hink met with a somewhat similar case. A ten-year-old cow was slaughtered, and in the middle lobe of the right lung there were yellowish nodules about the size of a pea, scattered over an area the size of the palm of the hand. These nodules were not at first sight distinguishable from ordinary tubercles, but on closer inspection they appeared to be somewhat different, and could be easily shelled out from the thickened lung tissue. On making a section, pus welled up at several points, and contained yellowish, calcareous particles. These particles, on microscopical examination, were found to be strongly calcified tufts of the actinomyces embedded in granulation cells. Addition of hydrochloric acid dissolved the calcareous matter, but had no action on the fungus. Pusch described a third case. The lungs of a cow, which had been killed on suspicion of having pleuro-pneumonia, were sent for examination. The front lobe of the left lung was collapsed and firm, the pleura was thickened and opaque; the larger bronchi were enlarged, filled with pus, and their walls thickened. In the posterior ACTINOMYCOSIS. 423 lobe of the left lung there was a cavity the size of the fist, which had been opened, and the contents had, for the most part, escaped ; what remained was a greyish, purulent liquid, full of yellowish bodies. By the side of this cavity there was another collection of pus, the size of a walnut. In the lower part of the second lobe of the right lung there was a firm, grey tumour, the size of a hen’s egg, over which the pleura was much thickened. On section this was cavernous, with similar purulent contents, and yellow grains. These grains under the microscope proved to be ray-fungi. The wall of the cavity consisted of dense connective tissue lined with a soft granulation tissue, bathed in pus. There was no disease of any other parts in this case, so that it corresponded in this respect with the two previous ones. Pusch adds that it was difficult to determine whether the organism had gained access to the lungs by the blood- vessels, or by the inspired air. In his case he inclined to the latter view, and concludes by saying that the organism is probably very common and attached to the most varied objects, from which it may be conveyed by the air. Pusch refers in the same paper to an interesting case which occurred in the practice of Eggeling. The latter had under his care a cow with extensive paralysis. The spinal cord was compressed by a compact swelling in the neck, consisting of the nodules of actinomycosis. There were no manifestations of disease in any other part of the body. Prevalence of the Disease.—The author found that the disease was not generally recognised as a common affection of cattle in this country, in spite of the interest excited by the work of Fleming, to whom is due the credit of first recognising a case in England. In 1887 there was a disease prevailing in Norfolk, and in the following year outbreaks were investigated by the author in Essex, Hertfordshire, Cambridgeshire, and Middlesex. In the Norfolk outbreak the author found on one farm & per cent. of the beasts affected with the so-called “‘wens” or “sitfasts,” which proved on microscopical examination to be cases of actinomycosis. These growths had previously been described in veterinary text-books as the result of strumous or scrofulous inflammation ; but in all the specimens of wens received from this country and the colonies, the author has been able to demonstrate the presence of the ray- fungus. A case of pulmonary actinomycosis, with grape-like growths on the pleura, indicated that wens were not the only manifestation of this disease, which had keen lost sight of under the designation of 424 INFECTIVE DISEASES. tuberculosis. Many other cases were examined, and the disease was shown to be prevalent in this country. Fic. 178.—From a photograph of a Norfolk steer. There is a growth about the size of an orange in front of the throat, an example of a so-called ‘‘scrofulous ” or “strumous” tumour. This growth was associated with a large polypoid growth in the pharynx which, by interference with deglutition, produced emaciation (Fig. 180). In Australia actinomycosis commonly occurs in the form of tumours of the upper and lower jaw, which were attributed to “cancer” or to ‘ scrofulous inflammation.” The diseace is still commonly known in Australia as “cancer” and “lumpy jaw.” Reports of the prevalence of actinomycosis in the United States have been published by the Board of Live Stock Commissioners for the State of Illinois. In their Report for 1890 several interesting communications were pub- Fie. 179.—A Norroik EIF 7 : : Sa Norrolx HEWER WITH A ished. Mr. Casewell, State Larcr ‘ WEN” IN THE Parorip REGION. 4 x P : Veterinarian, investigated an outbreak of this disease, known also in America as “lumpy jaw,’ ACTINOMYCOSIS. 425 on a farm in Yates City, where there were 80 head of cattle, and 16 were found to be suffering from actinomycosis. Mr. Casewell Fic. 180.—Photograph of a steer nearly three years old, but about the size of a yearling. The emaciation and deplorable aspect recall the appearance of “a, piner ” or ‘‘ waster ” (tuberculosis). reported that the disease was prevalent in nearly every county in that State, and that in his opinion it was spreading. In one instance 109 cases were slaughtered. Actinomycosis in Relation to Tuberculosis—When we consider the very high percentage of cases of tuberculosis which has been reported in some localities, the im- portance of differentiating actino- mycosis from tuberculosis cannot be over-estimated. The very great contrast in the appearance of the micro-organisms in the two cases renders this a very easy matter for the pathologist. But practical veterinarians and breeders of cattle are liable to mistake some manifestations of actinomycosis for tuberculosis. It is of the greatest im- portance to bear in mind that wens or clyers are really not tubercular, but actinomycotic; and Fic. 181.—Actinomycotic NopuLEs FROM THE PLEURA. 426 INFECTIVE DISEASES. \ that a condition of the lungs. may occur as the result of actino- mycosis, which from the naked-eye appearances may be mistaken for “orapes” or “angleberries.” It will be well also to remember in connection with the above remarks, that extreme emaciation may result in actinomycosis, producing a condition which, without a post-mortem examination, would probably be attributed to tuber- culosis, the animal being regarded as a “piner” or ‘“ waster.” If these possible fallacies are taken into account, the excessive per- centage of tubercular cases so commonly reported will be very considerably reduced. There is no evidence to show that the flesh of animals suffering from actinomycotic tumours is unfit for human consumption. In very severe cases it is unwholesome, but there is no evidence that it can produce actinomycosis in man. MAanirestaTIons oF ACTINOMYCOSIS IN Man. (I.) Invasion by the Mouth and Pharynx.—The fungus may gain access through carious teeth, or wounds or fistule of the jaw, and very possibly by inflammatory processes in the pharynx and tonsils. The disease attacks the ‘lower jaw most frequently. The tumour is found in close connection with the bone, or in the sub-maxillary or sub-mental regions, and also in the pre-tracheal region. It occurs, though rarely, in the interior of the bone. In a case described by Israél, which occurred in a woman aged forty-six, there was a small tumour about the size of a cherry attached to the external surface of the lower jaw, with an opening through which a probe could be passed into the bone. The tumour was incised and scraped away, and a cavity discovered in the bone, admitting a small sharp-spoon. Later, a further operation was performed: the periosteum was detached, the cavity of the bone enlarged, and the contents scraped out, consisting of granulation tissue, fragments of bone, and the yellowish fungi. At the bottom of the cavity the fang of the canine tooth was found. No return of the growth occurred. The first cases of actinomycosis which were observed in America were connected with the jaw. In 1884 Dr. Murphy described two cases at Chicago. The first was that of a woman aged twenty-eight. Two weeks previously she had suffered from severe toothache, with swelling in the throat and great pain in swallowing. It disappeared after poulticing, but she was again attacked with toothache, and a swelling appeared on the angle of the jaw on the left side. The ACTINOMYCOSIS. 427 mouth could not be opened without difficulty ; ‘the tonsil was much enlarged, and pus was set'free on incision. She still suffered with toothache, and a small swelling now occurred on the left side of the neck below the jaw. She had several carious teeth. The swelling, which was about the size of a walnut, was punctured, and a drainage tube inserted ; a creamy-looking discharge containing yellow granules continued to escape, but the swelling and induration increased. A further operation was decided upon. The carious tooth was removed, and a probe passed into the alveolus showed a communication with the external wound; the angle of the jaw was chiselled away, and the alveolus scraped out. Iodoformed gauze was applied, and the case recovered. The second case was a man aged eighteen, who had also suffered with severe toothache and swelling at the angle of the jaw. On examination a carious tooth was noticed. The swelling was well marked, and there was fluctuation ; it was as large as a pigeon’s egg, and situated below the jaw. When punctured, thick creamy pus escaped containing the fungi; the sinus was scraped out, and in ten days the wound was healed. Another swelling appeared, and this was treated as before, and the case recovered. The peculiar feature of these growths is their apparent migra- tion. Israél states that in one case a tumour occurred on the alveolar process, close to carious teeth, and later was close to the edge of the jaw in the sub-maxillary region. From thence it disappeared, and a large swelling formed below the hyoid bone, and after this had been incised and had healed, an abscess formed above the clavicle. Actinomycotic tumours in this region would sometimes appear to correspond very closely with wens or clyers in cattle; they may dis- charge through the skin, and the opening close, or a fistula result ; but they differ, from their tendency to form burrowing abscesses instead of recognisable tumours. In this respect they recall chronic inflammation rather than the sarcoma-like growths in cattle. Cases in which the upper jaw is attacked are not so frequent as those in the lower jaw. The progress is usually described as slow, and there is a tendency for the deep-seated soft parts to be involved, while in the lower jaw there is a tendency for the tumour to come to the surface. There may be burrowing suppuration, or small tumours, which, after a time, fluctuate and form distinct abscesses. These may involve the skin, discharge their contents, and leave fistulous openings. In other cases the disease has been described as extending from the alvcolar process to the temporal bone, or the base of the skull, 428 INFECTIVE DISEASES. destroying bones and even reaching the brain; or the growth may descend by the spinal column, implicating the vertebra, and travel- ling and pointing in various directions. (I1.) Invasion by the Respiratory Tract.-_In one recorded case the disease existed for seven years, was localised to the bronchi (Bronchitis actinomycotica), and did not extend into the lungs. The sputum was examined, and contained the characteristic fungus. If the micro-organisms are inhaled they pass into the bronchioles and alveoli, and produce proliferation of round cells, which undergo fatty degeneration. The resulting patches of peri-bronchitis or pneumonia become yellowish-white; suppuration and hemorrhage from the capillaries follow, and small cavities result, containing pus cells, fat granules, blood, and the fungi. In the neighbourhood of the new growth there is compression of the alveoli, and ultimately the formation of a dense stratum of connective tissue, separated from the cavities by a lining of granulation tissue containing the character- istic fungus. The symptoms are usually obscure; but the sputum may contain the fungi, which are often visible to the naked eye. The apices of the lungs are not, as a rule, affected. There is con- siderable clinical resemblance to chronic phthisis: cough, night- sweats, pallor, shortness of breath, and hemoptysis are symptoms common to both. Light may be thrown upon the case by the examina- tion of the sputum. The presence of the actinomyces will be positive evidence as to the nature of the disease. The existence of these symptoms, with absence of tubercle bacilli, would lead to the suspicion of actinomycosis, even failing the discovery of the fungus in the sputum. In the second stage the symptoms are more characteristic. The disease spreads to neighbouring parts, and pleurisy commonly super- venes. This extension may involve the peri-pleural tissues. Thus the disease may follow the pre-vertebral tissues, descend behind the insertion of the diaphragm, and point as an ordinary psoas or lumbar abscess; it may perforate the diaphragm and reach the abdominal cavity. Peritonitis or sub-phrenitic abscess may then result. In some cases adhesions have formed, and the disease has extended to the liver or spleen, or other abdominal organs. The disease may also extend forwards in the direction of the anterior mediastinum and the pericardium. The primary affection of the lung becomes of secondary import- ance. Grave symptoms occur, hectic fever, night-sweats, rigors, and marked pallor. In the third stage, the disease comes to the surface, either over the chest, or in the neighbourhood of the dorsal ACTINOMYCOSIS. 429 or lumbar vertebre ; a swelling appears of a livid colour, and if punctured no fluid escapes, but if allowed to make its own way to the surface, the skin gives way, a muco-purulent discharge mixed with pieces of the growth escapes, and the fungi can readily be recognised. (III.) Invasion of the Digestive Tract—In a case under Chiari, death, with general marasmus, took place at the age of thirty-four, after two years’ illness. The mucous membrane of the intestines was almost completely covered with whitish patches, raised in the centre, and covered with yellow and brown granules closely adherent to. the adjacent tissues. The teeth were carious. Small nodules about the size of a pea may be found in the sub- mucous tissue, and in the mucous membrane itself. They soften and form ulcers with undermined edges, the base reaching the: muscular layer. They may undergo cicatrisation, but generally the disease extends through the peritoneum to the abdominal cavity, and perforates the bladder or the intestines, or makes its way through the abdominal wall. Symptoms are either absent or not character- istic. The fungus may sometimes be found in the evacuations, or by exploratory puncture. (IV.) Undetermined.—In, addition there are a number of recorded cases presenting very varied symptoms and anatomical relations, in which it has not been possible to satisfactorily determine the path of infection. Delépine has described a most interesting case of an actinomycotic tumour of the brain. 1 MANIFESTATIONS or ACTINOMYCOSIS IN CATTLE. (I.) In the Digestive system we find the disease attacking :— (a) The lips, gums, buccal mucous membrane and palate, and appearing as nodules, wart-like growths, or ulcers. The nodules and ulceration of the palate were well shown in a specimen sent to- the author for examination, under suspicion of being the result of severe foot and mouth disease. (6) The upper and lower jaw, where it probably originates in carious teeth, and extending and invading the neighbouring cavities and sinuses destroys the tissues with which it comes in contact, expanding the bones into thin plates or reducing them to the appearance of pumice-stone. (c) The tongue, where we see it most commonly in the form of nodules or wart-like patches under the mucous membrane, with a special tendency to ulcerate, through the irritation of the teeth. These nodules may extend into the deep muscles, and often collect in rows. 430 INFECTIVE DISEASES. more or less parallel to the superficial muscular fibres. Complete tranverse sections of the tongue, double-stained, readily show this arrangement, even to the naked eye. Induration of the tongue results from secondary interstitial glossitis. The author has seen, in one case only, a tumour embedded in the substance of the tongue about the size of a small Tangierine orange, and more or less isolated from any surrounding growth. (d) The pharynx, where the disease may occur in the form of polypoid growths producing asphyxia. Fic. 182.—A Norroik STEER WITH EXTENSIVE ACTINOMYCOTIC ULCERATION OF THE SKIN OF THE FLANK. D (II.) In the Respiratory system we may meet with the disease in :— (a) The nasal cavities, originating primarily there or resulting from extension of a growth from the lips, or the pharynx. (b) The larynx and trachea, generally in the form of polypoid growths, sessile or pedunculated, which arise primarily or occur secondarily, by extension from the tissues in the neighbourhood. . (c) The lungs, where the differentiation of the disease is most important, as neoplasms in the lungs, especially in the early stages, and nodular growths on the pleura, may be mistaken for tuberculosis. The disease is very rarely found in connection with the Nervous system (II1.), but probably does not so rarely attack the Reproductive system (1V.). ACTINOMYCOSIS. 431 (V.) The skin and subcutaneous tissues are a favourite seat of this disease, producing the so-called wens or clyers socommonly seen in the fen country. A wen is first recognised as a small tumour, the size of a marble or walnut, which increases in size sometimes with great rapidity, and breaks down and discharges its muco-purulent contents through the inflamed and ulcerated skin ; or it may go on increasing, and form a large compact growth, the size of a child’s head. These growths when excised, hardened, and cut, have a characteristic honeycombed appearance, produced by the interlacing bands of fibrous tissue, which form a spongy structure, from the interstices of which the fungus tufts and thick yellowish pus have for the most part dropped out. Actinomyces Hominis.—Careful examination of pus from a case of actinomycosis in man will reveal to the naked eye little yellowish-white or yellow bodies, which a casual observer might mistake for grains of iodoform. On collecting some of the discharge in a test-tube, and holding it between the light and the eye, the tufts of fungi appeared as brownish or greenish-brown grains, embedded in a muco-purulent matrix. On spreading some of the discharge on a glass slip, the largest tufts of the fungus are found to be about the size of a pin’s head. They have’ a distinctly sulphur-yellow colour by reflected light, but appear of a yellowish or greenish-brown tint by transmitted light. With a sewing needle, or a platinum wire flattened at the end into a miniature spatula, the grains can be readily picked out of the discharge, or taken off the dressing, transferred to a clean slide, and gently covered with a cover-glass. Examined with an inch objective, they have the appearance of more or less spheroidal masses of a pale greenish-yellow colour. On removing the preparation from the microscope, and gently pressing down the cover-glass with the finger, the grains flatten out like specks of tallow; and on again examining with the same power they are found to have fallen apart into a number of irregular and sometimes wedge-shaped fragments of a faintly brown colour, affording a characteristic appearance. By preparing another specimen, and covering it with a cover-glass without completely flattening out the grains, the spherical, oblong and reniform masses of which the tufts are composed can be recognised with a }-in. objective as rosettes of clubs. By examining the peripheral part of a rosette with « 7'y-in., and especially after, pressing the grains into a thin layer, with or without the addition of a drop of glycerine, the characteristic clubs are most readily demonstrated, and the most varied shapes observed by carefully 432 INFECTIVE DISEASES. examining the form of the individual elements. As in the bovine fungus, every variation in form is found, from single clubs to clubs with lateral offshoots, clubs bifid at the extremity, palmate or fan-shaped groups, and banana-like bunches. In many cases the clubs are divided by transverse fission into two, three, or more segments. As a rule, the clubs are irregular in shape, and of about equal size, while a few are conspicuous by their length. In other parts of the preparation the clubs are replaced by long slender forms, which are sometimes transversely divided into a number of short links. With suitable illumination many clubs are seen to taper off into slender filaments. In addition there are free filaments, which are twisted, branched, and sometimes distinctly spirilliform. Many of the clubs are.composed of layers differing in their refractive power, and many have the appearance of a central channel. There are also in the preparation small, highly refractive bodies, fat granules, granular detritus, round cells, pus cells, and sometimes blood corpuscles. The grains differ, as a rule, from those from a bovine source, in the absence of that sensation of grittiness so often transmitted to the finger when pressing the cover-glass upon them, and in the slightly greater tendency of the tufts to retain their compact form. By teasing the grains in a drop of water on a slide,.and examining the preparation with a % or a 74 objective, the explanation of the latter is forthcoming ; for by this process the clubs are gradually washed away, and a central core remains, which is com- posed entirely of a dense network of filaments. This can readily be observed by using a small diaphragm, and it will be found that the rosettes of clubs are now replaced by tangled masses, having some resemblance to miniature tufts of cotton-wool. These filaments constitute the delicate network which is seen in sections stained by the method of Gram. This can be readily verified by making a cover-glass preparation of the grains, and staining by that method. the characters of the fungus can readily be studied by proper illumination, without staining. The clubs have a faintly greenish tint, and in form and arrangement are quite characteristic and easily recognisable. Permanent preparations may be made by mounting the fungus in glycerine. Description oF STAINED SPECIMENS. The fungus may be stained in alcoholic solution of eosin in the manner to be described for the bovine organism, or in orange-rubin, DESCRIPTION OF PLATES XV. AND XVI. Actinomyces. PLATE XV. Fic. 1—From a preparation of the grains from an actinomycotic abscess in a boy; examined in glycerine. The drawing has been made of a com- plete rosette examined by focussing successively the central and peripheral portions. Towards the centre the extremities of the clubs are alone visible; they vary in size, and if pressed upon by the cover-glass give the appearance of an irregular mosaic. Towards the periphery the clubs are seen in profile, and their characteristic form recognised. At one part there are several elongated elements, composed of separatelinks. x 1200. Fig. 2.—Different forms of clubs from preparations in which the rosettes have been flattened out by gentle pressure on the cover-glass. x 2500. (a) Single club. (0) Bifid club. (¢) Club giving rise to four secondary clubs. (d) Four clubs connected together, recalling the form of a bunch of bananas. (¢) Mature club with a lateral bud. (f/f) Apparently a further development of the condition represented at (e). (g) Club with a lateral bud and transverse segmentation. (h) Single club with double tranverse segmenta- tion. (4) Club with oblique segmentation. (j) Collection of four clubs, one with lateral gemmation, another with oblique segmentation, (%) Club with lateral buds on both sides, and cut off square at the extremity. (2) Club with a daughter club which bears at its extremity two still smaller clubs. (m) Club divided by transverse segmentation into four distinct elements. (2) Elongated club composed of several distinct elements. (0) and (p) Clubs with terminal gemmation. (7) Palmate group of clubs. (7) Trilobed club. (s) Club with apparently a central channel. (t) Filament bearing terminally a highly refractiveoval body. PLATE XVI. Fie. 1.—From a section of a portion of the growth removed from a boy during life. The tissue was hardened in alcohol, and cut in celloidin. The section was stained by Gram’s method and with orange-rubin. x 50. Fic. 2.—From the same section. “A mass of extremely fine filaments occupies the central part of the rosette. Many of the filaments have a terminal enlargement. The marginal part shows a palisade of clubs stained by the orange-rubin. x 500. Figs. 3 and 4.—From cover-glass preparations of the fungus teased out of the new growths produced by inoculation of a calf with pus from a boy suffering from pulmonary actinomycosis. Stained by Gram’s method and orange-rubin. The threads are stained blue and the clubs crimson (a) In the younger clubs the thread can be traced into the interior of the club (0). In some of the older clubs the central portion takes a yellowish stain, and in others the protoplasm is not continued as a thread, but is collected into a spherical or ovoid or pear-shaped mass. In others, again irregular grains stained blue are scattered throughout the central portion (Fig. 4). x 1200. Fig. 5. From a pure-culture on glycerine-agar. (a) branching filaments, (b) a mass of entangled filaments. Gram’s method. x 1200. Fie. 6.—From a similar but older cultivation. (a) a filament with spores (6) chains of spores simulating streptococci. Gram’s method. x 1200. (nw INC A ISOM AC ons) SWOT GOY SWYOM 10909 CLASSIFICATION AND DESCRIPTION OF SPECIES. 483 bacterium or a bacillus. To meet this difficulty a rough-and- ready rule was suggested—viz., that a rod less than twice its breadth in length should be considered as a bacterium, and other- wise a bacillus. But this purely arbitrary division was inadequate, from the fact that a rod at one stage of its growth or under certain conditions might, as far as length went, truly be a bacterium, and under other circumstances be of such a length as to entitle its being considered a bacillus (Fig. 197). We should avoid such confusion if we followed Zopf, and acknowledged as a difference between a bacterium and a bacillus the presence or absence of that form of spore-formation now distinguished as endogenous spore-formation, We might then conveniently retain this generic term, to include that group of rod-forms in which this spore-formation is as yet t Fie. 197.—F R1EpLANDER’s PnEuMococcus, x 1500 (Zopf). unknown; moreover, we should, by so doing, with one or two exceptions, collect together those short rod-forms which appear to link the simple cocci to the spore-bearing rods or bacilli. The grouping together of the different species according to the character of the colonies in nutrient gelatine is also of questionable advisability. These characters can hardly be considered to be of sufficient importance, or indeed in many cases to be sufficiently constant, to serve by themselves for this purpose. In many cases a slight variation in the composition of the nutrient medium may considerably affect the appearances of the colonies. At the same time, the appearances are very characteristic of certain species of bacteria, and in some cases the characters of the colonies, together with the characters of the growth in test-tubes, assist us in distinguishing species which are morphologically similar, as in the case of the comma-bacilli of Finkler and of Koch. 484 SYSTEMATIC. The classification of Zopf will lead the investigator to work upon the same lines, and by tracing the life-history of individual forms in pure-cultivations either to extend the work of establishing protean species or to restrict the doctrine of pleomorphism to a few forms. For though the author prefers the classification proposed by Zopf, he is not prepared to accept his views entirely—for instance, to regard the bacterium of rabbit septicaemia as a micrococcus. Any arrangement at present can only be considered provisional, and therefore the most practical classification must be considered the best. In fact, much more investigation is required before we can arrive at a permanent and thoroughly scientific classification of the known bacteria. Many bacteria have been described by different observers as different species which are really identical. Many micro-organisms have been described and named as new species with very insufficient investigation. The determination of species rests upon the accumulated evidence afforded by a thorough knowledge of their life-history. The morphological appearances under different conditions must be carefully studied, the presence or absence of movement and of spore-formation, and when present the exact character; the appearances of colonies and of test-tube cultivations in different media and under different circumstances ; the liquefaction and other changes in nutrient media; the nature of the chemical products, if any, and the effect on the living animal of the bacterium itself and of its products, in varying doses, must all be taken into account. We must also ascertain whether the bacterium is an aerobe requiring the presence of oxygen, or an -enaerobe growing only in the absence of it, or a facultative anuerobe growing equally well with or without it; and lastly, we must know whether the bacterium is a parasite requiring a living host, or a saprophyte existing on dead animal or vegetable matter, or a facultative parasite capable both of growing in the living animal and of leading a saprophytic existence. Several writers have classified the bacteria which have been described hitherto by taking some of these characters into account, and so preparing a list which is convenient for the purpose of bacteriological diagnosis. A system of this kind is of value in leading investigators to supply information which is wanting in order to verify and amplify the information upon which the classification is based, and to identify species which have been described under different names. CLASSIFICATION OF SPECIES FOR BACTERIOLOGICAL DIAGNOSIS (4) GELATINE NOT (a) Chromogenic. Micrococcus violaceus Micrococcus carneus . Micrococcus cerasinus siccus Micrococcus cinnabareus Micrococcus aurantiacus Micrococcus versicolor Micrococcus luteus Micrococcus citreus Micrococcus ochroleucus Micrococcus cereus flavus Micrococcus agilis citreus . Micrococcus flavus tardigradus . Staphylococcus viridis flavescens COCCI. LIQUEFIED. COLOUR. Violet Flesh-red . Cherry-red Cinnabar-red Orange Yellow Yellow Yellow Yellow Yellow Yellow Yellow Greenish- yellow (b) Non-Chromogenic. Micrococcus candicans Micrococcus candidus Micrococcus concentricus . Micrococcus fervidosus Micrococcus cereus albus - Micrococcus aquatilis Micrococcus aquatilis invisibilis Micrococcus cumulatus tenuis . Micrococcus rosettaceus Micrococcus viticulosus Micrococcus plumosus Micrococcus amylivorus Micrococcus acidi lactici Micrococcus uree ¢ é Micrococcus gingive pyogenes Micrococcus salivarius septicus Micrococcus of Manfredi . Micrococcus in pleuropneumonia Micrococcus in trachoma . ‘Heematococcus bovis . Diplococcus albicans tardissimus HABITAT, Water. Water. Water. Air; water. Water. Water. Water. Water. Water. Water. Air. Air; water. Lymph. Air; water. Water. Water. Water. Pus; water. Water. Water. Nasal mucus. Water. Air; water. Water. Pear-blight. Milk. Air; urine. Pus. Saliva. Sputum. Lymph. Conjunctiva. Urine. Vaginal secretion 486 CLASSIFICATION OF SPECIES Diplococcus coryze Pseudo-diplococcus pncuineate Micrococcus tetragenus Micrococcus tetragenus stcirilia wenihtieall Pediococcus cerevisize Pediococcus acidi lactici Streptococcus pyogenes Streptococcus brevis . Streptococcus septicus . . ’ Streptococcus vermiformis Streptococcus of mastitis in cows Streptococcus in strangles Streptococcus acidi lactici (ns) GELATINE LIQUEFIED. (a) Chromogenic. COLOUR. Micrococcus agilis . 3 Pink. Micrococcus roseus . 5 Pink. Staphylococcus pyogenes aureus Orange Micrococcus in pemphigus Orange Staphylococcus salivarius pyogenes Orange Micrococcus fuscus. Brown Micrococcus flavus destdens Yellowish-brown Micrococcus cremoides Yellowish-white Micrococcus botryogenus Yellowish. Micrococcus Finlayensis Pale- ce Staphylococcus pyogenes citreus Yellow Micrococcus citreus liquefaciens Yellow Micrococcus flavus liquefaciens . Yellow - Micrococcus tetragenus versatilis Yellow Diplococcus flavus liquefaciens tardus Yellow Diplococcus subfiavus Yellow Diplococcus citreus songlomenstus Yellow Diplococcus luteus Yellow Diplococcus roseus_. Pink. Diplococcus fluorescens perides Green (b) Non-Chromogenic. Micrococcus albus liquefaciens . Micrococcus aerogenes Micrococcus radiatus Micrococcus feetidus . Micrococcus in Biskra- iuttinis or Pendijch sore Micrococcus in influenza Micrococcus Freudertreichi Micrococcus in yellow fever Micrococcus lactis viscosus Micrococcus acidi lactici liquefaciens Micrococcus uree liquefaciens . Micrococcus in gangrenous mastitis in sheep . Staphylococcus pyogenes albus Staphylococcus pyosepticus Diplococcus albicans amplus HABITAT. Nasal mucus. Meningitis. Sputum. Stomach. Beer ; air. Malt ; hay-dust. Pus. Saliva. Soil. Water. Pus. Pus. Milk. Water. Sputum. Pus. Bulle. Saliva. Water. Air ; water. Water. Equine tumours. Yellow fever. Pus. Eczema. Air ; water. Blood. Eczema. Vaginal mucus. Pus ; air. Water. Air. Posterior nares. Nasal mucus. Intestine. Air ; water. Nasal mucus. Pus. Blood. Milk. Blood. Cream. Cheesy butter. Urine. Milk. Pus. Pus. Vaginal secretion. FOR BACTERIOLOGICAL DIAGNOSIS. Pediococcus albus Streptococcus liquefaciens Streptococcus septicus liquefaciens Streptococcus albus . Streptococcus of Mannaberg Streptococcus coli gracilis (c) NO GROWTH IN GELATINE. Micrococcus pneumoniz croupose Micrococcus endocarditidis rugatus . Nitromonas of Winogradsky Micrococcus in pemphigus Micrococcus in influenza . Micrococcus gonorrhoese ‘ Diplococcus intercellularis meuiagiaaie Micrococcus tetragenus subflavus Streptococcus giganteus urethre Streptococcus of Bonome . 487 HABITAT, Water. Blood. Blood. Water. Urine. Feeces. Saliva. Heart. Soil. Bulle Sputum. Pus. Meningitis. Nasal mucus. Urethra. Meningitis. (D) GROWTH IN GELATINE UNDETERMINED. Ascococcus Bilrothii . Leuconostoc mesenteroides Streptococcus of progressive tissue necrosis in mice Micrococcus pyogenes tenuis Micrococcus of pyeemia in rabbits Micrococcus of progressive abscess isemalien in mice Micrococcus of Forbes Micrococcus in syphilis Streptococcus Havaniensis Streptococcus perniciosus psittacorum Streptococcus bombycis PACKET COCCI. (s) GELATINE NOT LIQUEFIED. (a) Non-Chromogenic. Sarcina pulmonum Sarcina ventriculi (8) GELATINE LIQUEFIED. (a) Chromogenic. COLOUR, Sarcina mobilis . Red Sarcina rosea Red . Sarcina flavea Yellow Sarcina lutea Yellow Sarcina aurantiaca Orange-yellow . Meat infusion. Beet juice; mo- lasses. Putrid blood. Pus. Meat infusion. Putrid blood. Cabbage — cater- pillars. Blood Liver. Blood of parrot. Diseased silk- worms. Phthisical sputum. Stomach. Ascitic fluid. Air. Beer. Air. Air; water. 488 CLASSIFICATION OF SPECIES (b) Non-Chromogenic. HABITAT, Sarcina alba. i ‘ é é ‘ F Air; water. Sarcina candida : . : . Air of breweries. RODS. (I.) AEROBES OR FACULTATIVE ANAEROBES (A) GELATINE NOT LIQUEFIED. (a) Chromogenic. (4) SPORE-FORMATION PRESENT. (a) Motile. COLOUR. ‘ Bacillus cyanogenus Greyish-blue . Blue milk. - Bacillus erythrosporus ‘ Greenish-yellow . Water. Bacillus in infantile diarrhea (Lesagey Green Intestine. (b) Non-Motile. Bacillus brunneus P Brown . . Water. (8) SPORE-FORMATION UNKNOWN. (a) Motitle. Bacillus rubefaciens Pale-pink Water. Bacillus rubescens Pale-pink i Sewers. Bacillus fuscus limbatus . ‘ Brown . : Rotten eggs. Bacillus beroliniensis Indicus . Indigo-blue Water. Bacillus cyanogenus Jordaniensis Bluish . Sewers. Bacillus aurantiacus . Orange . ‘ Water. Bacillus fluorescens aureus Orange . Water. Bacillus fluorescens longus . Greyish-yellow Water. ~ Bacillus fluorescens tenuis . . Greenish-yellow Water. Bacillus constrictus Pale-yellow . Water. Bacillus subflavus Pale-yellow Water. Bacillus aureus. i Golden-yellow . Water; eczema. Bacillus flavescens . Yellow . Swamp-water. Bacillus heminecrobiophilus Yellowish Caseous glands. Bacillus canalis parvus Yellowish Sewer-water. Bacillus fluorescens putidus Greenish . Water. ‘Bacillus dentalis viridans Opalescent-green Carious dentine. “Bacillus virescens A Green. Sputum. (6) Non-Motile. Bacillus latericeus Brick-red Water. Bacillus spiniferus . Greyish-yellow Eczema. Bacillus in purpura lesinomhgien Greyish-yellow Blood. Bacillus uteus . Orange-yellow . Water. Bacillus in cholera in ducks Yellowish : Blood. Bacillus flavo-coriaceus Sulphur-yellow Water. Bacillus striatus flavis . Sulphur-yellow Nasal mucus. Bacillus fuscus . Deep-yellow . Water. Bacillus fluorescens non- liquetacions . Greenish-yellow Water. FOR BACTERIOLOGICAL DIAGNOSIS. (b) Non-Chromogenic, (4) SPORE-FORMATION PRESENT. (a) Motile. Bacillus putrificus coli Bacillus septicus vesica Bacillus in cancer (6) Non-Motile. Bacillus acidi lactici (Hueppe) . Bacillus coprogenes feetidus Bacillus subtilis similans . Bacillus epidermidis . Bacillus of Colomiatti (8) SPORE-FORMATION UNKNOWN. (a) Motile. Bacillus cedematis aerobicus Bacillus of Fulles (I.) Bacillus stolonatus Bacillus venenosus brevis . Bacillus venenosus é Bacillus gracilis anaerobiescens Bacillus invisibilis Bacillus albus ‘ Bacillus venenosus invisibilis Bacillus aquatilis sulcatus Bacillus argenteo-phosphorescens Bacillus gliscrogenus . Bacillus cystiformis . Bacillus of Guillebeau Bacterium Zopfii Bacillus ventriculi Bacillus coli communis Bacillus cavicida Bacillus of Utpadel . Bacillus aerogenes Helicobacterium aerogenes Bacterium aerogenes . Bacillus meningitidis purulentz Bacillus pyogenes foetidus Proteus Zenkeri Bacillus enteritidis Bacillus hyacinthi septicus Proteus lethalis . : Bacillus endocarditidis griseus . Bacillus of Roth (I.) . Bacillus Schafferi Bacillus of swine-plague Bacillus typhi abdominalis Bacillus cavicida Havaniensis . Bacillus cuniculicida Havaniensis 489 HABITAT. Human feces. Cystitis. Stomach. Sour milk. Swine measles. Human feces. Skin. Conjunctiva. Earth. Earth. Water. Water. Water. Water. Water. Water. Water Vater. Sea-water. Urine. - Urine. - Milk. Intestine ; air. Stomach of dogs. Intestine. Intestine. Intestine. Intestine. Intestine. Intestine. Pus. Pus. Putrid substances. Poisonous meat. Rotten hyacinths. Septicemia. Endocarditis. Old rags. Cheese ; potato. Lymphaticglands. Spleen and glands. Intestine. Intestine 490 CLASSIFICATION OF SPECIES (0) Non-Motile. Bacillus of Okada Bacillus pyogenes soli Bacillus of Fulles (II.) Bacillus candicans Bacillus septicus agrigenus Bacillus scissus . Bacillus ubiquitus Bacillus multipediculus Bacillus albus anaerobiescens Bacillus Zurnianus Bacillus canalis capsulatus Bacillus of Roth (II.) Bacillus tenuis sputigenus Bacillus crassus sputigenus Bacillus coprogenes parvus Bacillus of Fiocca Bacillus striatus albus Bacillus capsulatus mucosus Bacillus pseudo- ee nt Bacterium ure Bacillus nodosus parvus Bacillus oxytocus perniciosus . Bacillus lactis pituitosi Bacillus limbatus acidi lactici Bacillus ovatus minutissimus Bacillus of Belfanti and Pascarola Bacillus of Tommasoli Bacillus capsulatus . Bacillus of purpura hosmorrhagiéa (Babes) Bacillus of purpura hemorrhagica (Kolb) Bacillus septiceemiz hemorrhagice . Proteus capsulatus septicus Bacillus acidiformans Bacillus coli similis . Bacillus hepaticus fortuitus Bacillus filiformis Havaniensis Bacillus of Martinez. Bacillus diphtherize columbraram Bacillus diphtherie . Bacillus of Schimmelbusch Bacillus capsulatus Smithii Bacillus erysipelatis suis . Bacillus in rhinoscleroma . Bacillus of Friedlinder Bacillus pneumosepticus . Bacillus endocarditidis capsulatus Bacillus septicus keratomalaciz Bacillus of intestinal diphtheria in rabbits Bacillus of acne contagiosa of horses Bacillus pseudo-tuberculosis Bacterium tholeeideum Bacillus gallinarum . HABITAT. Dust. Earth. Soil, Soil. Manured soil. Soil. Air; water. Air; water. Water. Water. Sewer-water. Old rags. Sputum. Sputum. Feeces. Saliva. Nasal mucus. Nasal secretion. Healthy throat. Urine. Healthy urethra. Milk. Milk. Milk, Eczema. Pus. Hair with sycosis. Blood. Blood. Blood. Blood. Blood. Liver. Liver. Liver. Liver. Liver. Diphtheritic de-* posit. Diphtheritie throat. Cancrum oris. Intestine. Blood. Rhinoscleroma. Sputum. Septic pneumonia, Endocarditis. Internal organs. Intestine. Pus. Internal organs. Intestine. Blood. FOR BACTERIOLOGICAL DIAGNOSIS. Bacillus argenteo-phosphorescens .. Bacillus smaragdino-phosphorescens Bacillus phosphorescens gelidus Proteus hominis capsulatus Bacillus of grouse disease. Bacillus lactis aerogenes . (4) GELATINE LIQUEFIED. (a) Chromogenic. (A) SPORE-FORMATION PRESENT. (a) Motile. Bacillus violaceus Bacillus in disease of bees (Canestrini) Bacillus in ‘‘red-cod ” Bacillus mesentericus ruber Bacillus fluorescens _ liquefaciens minutissimus . COLOUR. Deep-violet Pink. Red . Reddish-yellow Greenish-yellow (8) SPORE-FORMATION UNKNOWN. (a) Motite. Bacillus ianthinus Bacillus violaceus TLiereaklis Bacillus lividus . Bacillus carnicolor Bacillus rubidus . Bacillus Indicus . Bacillus rosaceus mietatiniden Bacillus ochraceus Bacillus citreus cadaveris . Bacillus buccalis minutus . Bacillus arborescens . Bacillus fulvus Bacillus plicatilis Bacillus pyocyaneus . Bacillus fluorescens Liqnefacians Bacillus cyanofuscus . Bacillus fluorescens nivalis Bacillus chromo-aromaticus Bacillus viscosus. Bacillus pyocyaneus . Bluish-violet Deep-violet Violet-black Dark flesh-colour Brownish-red . Sealingwax-red Magenta-red Yellow Yellow Yellow Yellow Yellow Vellowis. Yellowish-green Greenish-yellow. Greenish-brown Bluish-green Green or brown Green Green (b) Non-Motile. Bacillus cceruleus Bacillus glaucus . Bacillus membranaceus amethystinus Bacillus lactis erythrogenes Bacillus mycoides roseus Blue. Grey. Violet Red . Red . 491 HABITAT, Fish. Fish. Cuttlefish. Blood. Blood. Intestine. Water. Larvee of bees. Salted codfish. Potatoes. Skin. Water. Water. Water. Water. Water. Intestine. Water. Water. Blood. Saliva. Water. Water. Water. Pus. Water. Cheese ; glue. Water. Intestine. Water. Pus. Water. Water. Water. Milk. Soil. 492 CLASSIFICATION OF SPECIES Bacillus prodigiosus . Bacillus hydrophilus fuscus Bacillus cuticularis Bacillus helvolus Bacillus tremelloides Ascobacillus citreus COLooR, Blood-red . Yellow Yellow Yellow Yellow Yellow Bacillus igenkeo. phos ghovcseons liquefaciens Bacterium termo (Vignal) . Bacillus smaragdinus foeetidus Yellowish Yellowish Green (b) Non-Chromogenic. (4) SPORE-FORMATION PRESENT. Bacillus infiatus Urobacillus Freudenreichi_ Bacillus mycoides - Bacillus ramosus Bacillus gracilis . Bacillus circulans Urobacillus Duclauxi Urobacillus Maddoxi Bacillus limosus . Bacillus butyricus Bacillus Hessii . Bacillus lactis albus . Bacillus liodermos Urobacillus Pasteuri . Bacillus mesentericus fuscus Bacillus mesentericus vulgatus . Bacillus of potato rot Bacillus maidis . Bacillus megatherium Bacillus tumescens Bacillus subtilis . Bacillus subtilis similis Bacillus vacuolosis - Bacillus of Scheurlen Bacillus alvei Bacillus aerophilus Bacillus implexus Bacillus filiformis Bacillus vermicularis Bacillus incanus Bacillus inunctus Bacillus granulosus Bacillus carotarum (a) Motile. (b) Non-Motile. HABITAT. Air. Frog’s lymph. Water. Water. Water. Skin. Sea-water. Saliva. Ozzena. Air. Air ; dust 5 sewers. Soil; water. Soil; water. Water. Water. Water. Water. Sea-dredgings. Milk. Milk. Milk. Milk. Urine. Potato; dust; water. Potato; water, etc.. Rotting potatoes. Maize infusion. Boiled cabbage. Beet-root. Dust ; water ; soil. Liver. Liver. Cancerous tissues. Larve of bees. Air. Water. Water. Water. Swamp-water. Swamp-water. Sea-dredgings. Boiled carrot. FOR BACTERIOLOGICAL DIAGNOSIS, Bacillus brassicze Bacillus in gangrene . Bacillus of Letzerich . Bacillus anthracis (8) SPORE-FORMATION UNKNOWN. (a) Motile. Bacillus pestifer Bacillus diffusus Bacillus gasoformans Bacillus liquidus Bacillus guttatus Bacillus liquefaciens . Bacillus radiatus aquatilis Bacillus nubilis . 4 Bacillus albus putidus Bacillus hyalinus Bacillus vermiculosus Bacillus delicatulus Bacillus punctatus Bacillus reticulans Bacillus figurans CVn ind Urobacillus Schutzenbergi Bacillus devorans Bacillus venenosus liqudliciens: Bacillus aquatilis Proteus sulphureus Bacillus stoloniferus . Bacillus phosphorescens frdiews Bacillus phosphorescens indigenus Bacillus cyaneo-phosphorescens Bacillus litoralis Bacillus halophilus Bacillus superficialis . Bacillus cloace . Proteus microsepticus Proteus vulgaris. Proteus mirabilis Proteus septicus Bacillus foetidus ozenz , Bacillus septicus ulceris gangrenosi . Bacillus albus cadaveris Bacillus of Guillebeau Bacillus Havaniensis liquefaciens Bacillus carabiformis P - Bacillus of Schou Bacillus leporis lethalis Bacillus liquefaciens communis (0) Non-Motile. Bacillus buccalis fortuitus . 493 HABITAT. Cabbage infusion. Senile gangrene. Urine. Blood. Air. Soil. Water. Water. Water. Water. Water. Water. Water. Water. Water. Water. Water. Water. Water. Water. Water. Water. Water. Water. Swamp-water. Sea-water. Sea-water. Sea-water. Sea-dredgings. Sea-dredgings. Sewage. Sewage. Uterine dis- charges, Putrid substances. Putrid substances. Septicemia. Nasal mucus. Blood and organs. Blood. Milk. Skin. Stomach. Rabbit. Liver. Liver. Saliva. 494 CLASSIFICATION OF SPECIES HABITAT. Bacillus ulna (Vignal) Saliva. Leptothrix buccalis (Vignal) Mouth. Bacillus varicosus conjunctive . Conjunctiva. Bacillus gingive pyogenes Alveolar abscess. Bacillus pulpe pyogenes . Gangrenous tooth- pulp. Bacillus graveolens ° Skin of feet. Pneumo-bacillus liquefaciens bovis . Lung. (c) NO GROWTH IN GELATINE. (A) SPORE-FORMATION PRESENT. (a) Motite. Bacillus ulna. . é White of egg. Bacillus in putrid bronchitis Sputum. Bacillus mallei . Glandered tissue. (b) Non-Motile. Bacillus in erythema nodosum . Blood. Bacillus tuberculosis . Tubercular tissue- (8) SPORE-FORMATION ABSENT. Bacillus sanguinis typhi Blood. Bacillus septicus acuminatus Septic infection. Bacillus necrophorus . Condyloma. (c) SPORE-FORMATION NOT STATED. , Bacillus allantoides Air. Bacillus nitrificans Soil. Bacillus in measles Blood. Bacillus in ophthalmia Conjunctiva. (D) GROWTH IN GELATINE NOT STATED. Bacillus senilis . Bacillus leptosporus . Bacillus allii Bacillus indigogenus . Blood. Air. Putrefying onions. . Infusion of indigo. Il. ANAEROBES. (4) GELATINE LIQUEFIED. Bacillus rubellus Bacillus butyricus (Botkin) Clostridium foetidum (4) SPORE-FORMATION PRESENT, (a) Motile. Dust. Milk;water; dust Earth. FOR BACTERIOLOGICAL DIAGNOSIS, ‘Bacillus radiatus Bacillus liquefaciens magnus Bacillus spinosus Bacillus thalassophilus Bacillus of symptomatic anthrax Bacillus edematis maligni Bacillus tetani. . (6) Non-Motile. Bacillus liquefaciens parvus Bacillus anaerobicus liquefaciens (8B) GELATINE NOT LIQUEFIED. (4) SPORE-FORMATION PRESEN. (a) Motile. Bacillus amylozyma . Bacillus solidus . Bacillus polypiformis (b) Non-Motile. Bacillus muscoides (8) SPORE-FORMATION ABSENT. (b) Non- Motile. Bacillus aerogenes capsulatus 495 HABITAT. Earth. Earth. Earth. Sea-dredgings, Tissues (quarter-ill). Lymph. Wounds ; earth. Earth. Yellow fever. Water. Earth. Earth. Earth. Blood. (c) GROWTH IN GELATINE NOT STATED. (4) SPORE-FORMATION PRESENT. (a) Motile. Bacillus butyricus . : . (3) SPORE-FORMATION UNKNOWN. Bacillus cadaveris CURVED RODS. (a) GELATINE NOT LIQUEFIED. (a) Chromogenic. (a) Motile. : COLOUR. Spirillum rubrum ‘ ‘ . Deep-red (b) Non-Chromogenic. Spirillum suis Vegetable infu- sions, etc. Liver. Putrid mouse. Intestine of swine. 496 CLASSIFICATION OF SPECIES Spirillum concentricum Spirillum saprophiles (b) Non-Motile. (a) Chromogenic. COLOUR. Spirillum flavescens Yellowish-green Spirillum flavum Ochre-yellow Spirillum aureum Orange-yellow . (b) Non-Chromogenic. Spirillum lingue Spirillum nasale GELATINE LIQUEFIED. (a) Non-Chromogenic. (a) Motile. Spirillum cholere Asiatice Spirillum of Finkler and Prior. Spirillum Metchnikovi Spirillum of Miller Spirillum of Sanarelli Spirillum tyrogenum Spirillum marinum HABITAT. Putrefying blood. Hay-infusion; sewage. Sewers. Sewers. Sewers. Deposit on tongue. Nasal mucus. Intestine. Intestine. Intestine of fowls. Carious teeth. Water. Old cheese. Sea-dredgings. NO GROWTH IN GELATINE, OR UNDETERMINED. (@) Motitle. Spirillum Obermeieri Spirillum anserum Spirillum undula Spirillum sputigenum Spirillum serpens Spirillum tenue . Spirillum volutans Spirillum plicatile (b) Non-Motile. Spirillum dentium Spirillum sanguineum Blood. Blood of geese. Putrid infusions. Gums. Stagnant water. Putrid infusions. Swamp-water. Swamp-water. Gums. Brackish water. BRANCHING FILAMENTS. Streptothrix actinomycotica. Streptothrix alba. Streptothrix liquefaciens. Streptothrix musculorum suis. Streptothrix Hofmanni. Streptothrix farcinica. Streptothrix asteroides. Streptothrix carnea. FOR BACTERIOLOGICAL DIAGNOSIS. 497 Streptothrix aurantiaca. Streptothrix chromogenes. Streptothrix odorifera. Streptothrix violacea. Streptothrix Forsteri. Streptothrix madure. NOT CLASSIFIED. Bacillus indigonaceus. Bacillus proteus fluorescens. Beggiatoa alba. Beggiatoa mirabilis. Beggiatoa roseo-persicina. Cladothrix dichotoma. Cladothrix invulnerabilis. Crenothrix Kuhniana. Diplococcus citreus liquefaciens. Leptothrix buccalis. Leptothrix gigantea. Micrococcus aquatilis invisibilis. Micrococcus crepusculum. Micrococcus feetidus. Micrococcus Havaniensis. Micrococcus of septicemia in rabbits. Monas Okenii. Monas vinosa. Monas Warmingii. Myconostoc gregarium. Rhabdomonas rosea. Sarcina hyalina. Sarcina intestinalis, Sarcina litoralis. Sarcina Reitenbachii. Sarcina urine. Spherotilus natans. Spirillum attenuatum. Spirillum leucomelaneum. Spirillum rosaceum. Spirillum Rosenbergii. Spirillum rufum. Spiromonas Cohnii. Spiromonas volubilis. Streptococcus cadaveris. Streptococcus flavus desidens. Vibrio rugula. 32 DESCRIPTION OF SPECIES ARRANGED FOR REFERENCE IN ALPHABETICAL ORDER. Ascococcus Billrothii—Small globular cocci, united into charac- teristic colonies. They form on the surface of nourishing fluids a cream-like skin, divisible into an enormous number of globular or oval families. Each family is surrounded by a thick capsule of cartilaginous consistency. In a solution containing acid tar- trate of ammonia the fungi generate butyric acid, and change the origin- ally acid fluid into an alkaline one. Fig. 198.—Ascococcts BILLROTHIT (Cohn). They were first observed on putrid broth, and later on ordinary nourish- ing solutions; they also readily de- velop upon damp slices of boiled roots, carrots, beetroots, etc. Ascobacillus citreus (Unna, Tommasoli).— Rods sometimes curved, 1°3 u in length, ‘3 » in width, singly, in pairs, and masses. The colonies develop slowly, and are yellowish in colour. The cocci inoculated in the depth of gelatine form small colonies in the track of the needle, anda slimy pale-yellow growth on the surface ; liquefaction sets in slowly. On agar the growth is gelatinous, and orange in colour, and rapidly extends over the surface. On potato the growth is abundant, and pale yellow. They were isolated from the skin in eczema seborrhceicum. Bacillus acidiformans (Stern- berg).—Short rods, 1:5 to 3 pw in length, 1°2 « in width, and filaments. 5 to 10 p. Colonies circular ; iridescent by reflected light. Inoculated in the depth of gela- tine they grow freely in the track of the needle, and form a hemispherical mass on the surface. They produce gas bubbles. On agar the growth is milk-white, and the jelly becomes strongly acid. On potato the growth is abundant. In broth with 5 per cent. glycerine they produce opacity and a copious viscid deposit, and the surface is covered with gas bubbles, Injected into the peritoneal cavity of rabbits and guinea-pigs, they produce death in twenty-four hours, They were isolated from the liver in a fatal case of yellow fever. Bacillus acidi lactici (Hueppe). —Rods 1 to 2°8 » long, and ‘3 to ‘4 » wide, and thread forms. Spore- formation present. In_ gelatine 498 DESCRIPTION OF SPECIES. cultures the breadth of the rods is diminished. They grow best be- tween 35° and 42° C., and cease under 10° C. Over 45°5° C. they no longer produce acidity, Whitish colonies appear on the second day. In gelatine a delicate growth appears along the whole track of the needle, with spherical forms here and there. In milk they produce lactic acid and the casein is precipitated. Bacillus aerogenes (Miller).— Small rods varying in length. Colonies white or yellowish-white ; concentric. In the depth of gelatine they produce a yellowish filament, and on the surface a grey patch with dentated periphery ; later the fila- ment is brown. On potato the growth is yellowish and dry. They were isolated from the in- testine in health. Bacillus aerogenes capsulatus (Welch).—Rods straight or slightly curved, 3 to 6 yw; threads and chains ; capsulated. Colonies on agar greyish-white, with hairy processes. They peptonise gelatine and pro- duce gas. Broth becomes turbid, and there is an abundant sediment. Milk is coagulated. Cultures have a faint smell of glue. Injected into rabbits they pro- duce gas in the blood and internal organs. They were isolated from a patient after death, with blood-vessels full of gas. Bacillus aerophilus (Liborius). —Rods and filaments. Colonies punctiform ; yellow. Inoculated in the depth of gela- tine the bacilli produce a funnel of liquefied jelly, with flocculi in the lower part. On potato they form a smooth yellowish layer. They were isolated from con- taminated cultures. Bacillus albus (Hisenberg).— Rods and chains. greyish- 499 Colonies circular, white. In gelatine the bacilli grow in the track of the needle, and form a white hemispherical mass on the free surface. On agar the growth is pure white, and on potato yellowish- white. They occur in water. Bacillus albus anaerobiescens (Vaughan).—Short rods. Colonies circular, brown. Inoculated in the depth of gela- tine they grow in the track of the needle, and on the free surface. On agar the growth is pure white, and on potato yellowish-white. They occur in water. Bacillus albus cadaveris (Straussmann and Stricker).—Rods 2-5 win length, ‘75 » in width, and filaments. Colonies yellowish ; circular, and later radiated. Inoculated in the depth of gela- - tine they produce a funnel of lique- fied gelatine with a thick deposit. On agar there is an abundant white growth. Ou potato the growth is white or yellowish-white, and colours the potato in the vicinity bluish-brown. The cultures have a putrefactive odour. Mice inoculated subcutaneously die in six hours, and guinea-pigs in twenty-four. They were isolated from putrid human blood. Bacillus albus putidus (De Bary).—Rods and filaments. Colonies circular and brownish. Inoculated in the depth of gela- tine they . produce rapid lique- faction. > On agar and potato the growth is slimy. Cultures develop a strong putrefactive odour. They occur in water. Bacillus allantoides (L. Klein). —Rods 2 to 2°5 p in length, ‘5 » in width, and in chains. The rods develop cocci-forms united by a gelatinous substance into zoogleea masses. They were isolated from a contaminated culture. Bacillus allii (Griffiths).—Rods yellowish- 500 DESCRIPTION 5 to 7 » in length, 2°5 » in width, singly, in pairs, and zoogloea. On agar they produce a bright green film, and cultures are said to emit traces of sulphuretted hydro- gen. , They were isolated from putrid onions. Bacillus alvei (p. 470). Bacillus amylozyma (Perdrix). —Rods 2 to 3 » in length and ‘5 p in width, in pairs, and in chains. They are anaerobic. Colonies white, and producing gas bubbles. On potato in an atmosphere of hydrogen the bacilli partly liquefy it, and there is abundant formation of gas. They ferment sugar and starch. Bacillus anaerobicus lique- faciens (Sternberg).—Slender rods, about ‘6 » in diam., in pairs, and in filaments. Colonies granular and white ; sur- rounded by liquefied gelatine. They grow along the track of the needle when inoculated in the depth of agar. They were isolated from the in- testine in a fatal case of yellow fever. Bacillus anthracis (p. 192). Bacillus aquatilis (Frankland). —Rods 2°5 » in length, and filaments 17 » or longer. They resemble Bacillus arborescens. Colonies after liquefaction of the gelatine have a yellowish-brown nucleus from which proceed twisted strands of filaments. Inoculated in the depth of gela- tine the growth in the track of the needle is at first almost invisible, later liquefaction occurs. On agar the growth is shining and yellowish. Broth becomes turbid, and a sediment forms at the bottom of the tube. On potato there is a slightly yellowish streak. They occur in water. Bacillus aquatilis fluorescens (Lustig).—Short thin rods with rounded ends. Non-motile. Colonies fern-like and iridescent. 4 OF SPECIES. Compare Eisenberg’s Bacillus fluo- rescens non-liquefaciens. Bacillus aquatilis graveolens (Tataroff).—Slender rods 1:3 » in length. They rapidly liquefy gela- tine and produce an odour like that of perspiration from the feet. They occur in water. Bacillus aquatilis sulcatus (Weichselbaum), No. I.—Rods mor- phologically, and in cultures resem- bling Bacillus typhosus. Colonies in gelatine exhibit lin and furrows. The growth on the surface of gelatine is said to be greater than in cultures of Bacillus typhosus grown for comparison. They occur in water, No. IJ.—Rods also resembling in morphology and cultivation the Bacillus typhosus. Colonies are said to be thicker than those of No. I., and not dentated. The growth on potatoes is yel- lowish-brown, and emits a faint odour of urine. They occur in water. No. III.—Very short rods. Colonies show lines and furrows, and are yellowish, On the surface of gelatine the growth develops as a thin whitish film. ; On agar the growth is white and abundant. On potato the growth is yellow. They were isolated from water. No. IV.—Rods and filaments. Colonies circular and bluish. On the surface of gelatine the growth is greyish-white, and on agar there is a similar appearance. They do not grow on potato, They occur in water. No. V.—Rods rather thicker than those of Bacillus typhosus. Colonies similar to those of No. I. The growth on the surface of gelatine is yellow. On agar the growth is viscid and yellow, and on potato the growth is faintly yellow and the surrounding medium stained bluish-grey. They occur in water. Bacillus arborescens (Frank- land)—Rods 2°5 p in length, and es DESCRIPTION OF SFECIES. ‘5 p» in width, singly, in pairs, and in short chains, and filaments. Colonies throw out delicate branches with a highly characteristic appearance ; the gelatine slowly liquefies, the nucleus of the colony becomes yellow, and the periphery iridescent. Inoculated in the depth of gela- tine the bacilli form a cloudiness in the track of the needle, and an iridescent layer on the surface with central depression of the gelatine and commencing liquefaction. Later the liquefaction produces a funnel, and there is a yellow deposit. On the surface of agar the layer is a dirty orange colour. On potato the growth is orange red with irregular protuberances, and limited in growth. They occur in water. Bacillus argenteo-phosphores- cens (Katz), No. I.—Rods slightly curved with pointed ends, 2°5 » in length, width one-third of their length ; singly, in pairs, and long wavy filaments. Colonies circular ; at first trans- parent droplets, later yellowish in colour. On the surface of gelatine they form a greenish-yellow film. In broth they produce turbidity, and later a skin on the surface, and on sterilised fish a pale-yellow sticky growth. Cultures are photogenic. They were isolated from the sea at Sydney. No. II.—Rods with rounded ends -27 » in length, 67 » in width, and filaments. Colonies on gelatine are circular with sharp contours and greyish- yellow in colour; later they are irregular and granular. Inoculated in gelatine the bacilli form a greyish-white filament in the track of the needle, and a shining patch on the surface, On the surface of obliquely solidi- fied gelatine they form a bluish- grey film. In broth they produce only turbidity. 501 Cultures are photogenic. They were isolated from phospho- rescent fish. No. IfI.—Rods not so thick as those of No. IT., singly, in pairs, and filaments. They are motile. Colonies are white, scaly, and wrinkled. On the surface of gelatine the growth spreads over the medium. On agar the growth is scanty. In broth they produce turbidity and a skin floating on the surface. Cultures are photogenic after a few days’ growth. They were isolated from a piece of cuttle-fish. Bacillus argenteo-phosphores- cens liquefaciens.—Rods straight or slightly bent, 2 » in length, and in width one-third of their length ; filaments. Colonies circular, pale brown or pale yellow and, after liquefaction, with radiating processes extending into the surrounding gelatine. Inoculated in the depth of gela- tine there is a growth in the track of the needle, and near the surface a cup-sbaped area of liquefaction. In broth they produce turbidity, and form a skin on the surface. On sterilised fish they form a yellow layer. They are photogenic but not markedly so. Bacillus aurantiacus (Frank- land).—Rods short and thick, singly, in pairs, and in filaments. Colonies are prominent and pale orange in colour. Inoculated in the depth of gela- tine there is a slight growth in the track of the needle and an orange patch on the free surface. On agar and potato the growth is also orange. They occur in water. Bacillus aureus (Adametz).— Slender rods straight or slightly bent, 1:5 to 4 » in length, and ‘5 » in width; in pairs, filaments, and masses. They are motile. Colonies circular or oval and yellow in colour. Inoculated in the depth of gela- tine the growth is very limited in 502 the track of the needle, while small chrome-yellow hemispherical masses develop on the free surface. On potato they form a chrome- yellow growth. They occur in water and on the skin. Bacillus berolinensis Indicus (Clissen).—Slender rods, singly, in pairs, and short chains ; capsulated. Colonies at first whitish acquire in a few days an indigo-blue colour. On the surface of gelatine they form a blue layer, which slowly spreads. On the surface of agar the indigo- blue colour is very marked. On potato they grow abundantly, and develop the same colour. The pigment is insoluble in alcohol, chloroform or water, soluble in strong acids, and decolorised by ammonia. They were isolated from river water at Berlin. Bacillus brassice (Pommer).— Rods 1:9 to 5-4 » in length, 91 to 1:2 » in width, and filaments. They form spores. Colonies have the appearance of a fine mycelium. Inoculated in the depth of gela- tine the growth in the track of the needle sends off fine filaments, and liquefaction quickly follows. In the depth of agar white colonies form in the track of the needle, and on the surface the growth is first cloudy and later yellowish. They were isolated from infusion of cabbage. Bacillus brevis (Mori).—Rods ‘25 pw long and ‘8, broad. Non- motile. Colonies pale-yellow ; non-lique- fying. Inoculated in the depth of gela- tine small dots appear along the needle track and a pale yellowish growth on the surface. On agar at 35° C. a yellowish and on blood serum a greyish growth appears in two or three ‘days. They do not grow on potato. In broth they form a white cloudy deposit. DESCRIPTION OF SPECIES. Mice inoculated subcutaneously die in from sixteen to thirty hours. They are also pathogenic in guinea- pigs and rabbits. They were found in drain water. Bacillus brunneus (Adametz and Wichman).—Rods small and slender. Spore formation present. Colonies at first white, later brownish. Inoculated in the depth of gela- tine the growth occurs along the track of the needle and also on the surface, developing a brownish colour in the surrounding gelatine. They occur in water. Bacillus buccalis fortuitus (Vignal)—Rods 1:4 to 3 mw in length, singly, and in pairs. Colonies circular and liquefying. Inoculated in the depth of gela- tine liquefaction occurs slowly, and white flocculi occur in the liquid, and later subside to the bottom. - In broth they produce turbidity and a skin on the surface. They were isolated from saliva. Bacillus buccalis maximus (Miller).—Rods 2 to 10 » in length, 1 to 13 win width, and filaments 30 to 150 » in length. j They occur in the mouth. Bacillus buccalis minutus (Vig- nal).—Rods 5 to 1 p» in length, and slightly less in width. Colonies circular and faintly yellow. Inoculated in the depth of gela- - tine they form a yellowish-white growth in the track of the needle, and a patch of the same colour on the surface; liquefaction com- mences slowly, and extends down- wards until the gelatine is com- pletely liquefied and a yellow mass collects at the bottom of the tube. In broth there is a similar deposit, and an iridescent pellicle on the ‘surface. On potato they form a yellow film. They were isolated from saliva. Bacillus butyricus, (Praz- mowski. Bacillus amylobacter, Van Tieghem ; Bacillus of butyric acid JSermentation).—Rods 3 to 10 p» long, under 1 » wide, often indistinguish- able from Bacillus subtilis. They DESCRIPTION grow out into long, apparently un- jointed threads. They are mostly actively motile, but also occur in zoogloeea. The rods and threads are sometimes slightly bent, like vibrios. They are anaerobic. The shorter rods asa rule swell in the middle, becoming ellipsoidal, lemon, A "0 b¢) 7) "Ca Fic. 199.—CLostRIDIUM BUTYRICUM. A. Active stage. (a, b) Bent rods (vibrio- form) and threads. (c) Short rods. (d) Long rods. . B. Spore-formation. C. Spore-germina- tion. (Prazmowski.) or spindle-shaped ; the long rods, and sometimes the short ones, swell at one end ; in either case ellipsoidal ‘Spores are developed (Fig. 199). Cultivated in nutrient gelatine, the medium is liquefied, and a scum formed on the surface. They grow h Ny OF SPECIES. 503 best between 35° and 40° C. The spores are widely distributed in nature, and grow readily on fleshy roots, old cheese, etc. They convert the lactic acid in milk into butyric acid, and produce the ripening of. cheese. They occur also in solutions of starch, dextrine, and sugar, and are the active agents in the fermenta- tionof sauerkrautand sour gherkins. Bacillus butyricus (Botkin).— Rods and filaments, spore-formation present. They are anaerobic. Colonies consist of felt-like masses. Inoculated in the depth of gela- tine with 1:5 per cent. of grape- sugar, the growth commences in the lower part of the needle track with abundant formation of gas bubbles and liquefaction of the jelly. In milk there is abundant gas formation, which will break the flasks if closed. They were isolated from milk, earth, and water. Bacillus butyricus (Hueppe).—Rods slightly bent, 21 » in length, 38 » in width, and filaments. Colonies yellowish; rapidly liquefying. Inoculated in the depth of gelatine liquefaction occurs along the track of the needle, and later a wrinkled skin floats on the surface. On agar the growth is yel- lowish. On potato the growth is wrinkled and faintly yellow. They coagulate milk, precipita- ting and then dissolving the casein. They occur in milk. Bacillus cadaveris (Sternberg), —Rods 1° to 4 p» in length, and 1:2 » in width, singly, in pairs, and in filaments. They are anaerobic. Colonies in glycerine-agar are irregular, granu- lar, and white. They produce an acid reaction in cultures. : Subcutaneous injection in guinea- pigs may produce extensive 504 DESCRIPTION oedema and death in twenty-four hours. They were obtained from the liver in fatal cases of yellow fever. Bacillus ceruleus (Smith).— Rods 2 to 2°5 pin length, and ‘5 p in width, singly and in chains. Colonies blue. Inoculated in the depth of gela- tine they form a colourless growth in the track of the needle, and a cup-shaped cavity in its upper part, with bluish contents. On agar they form a blue layer and a deep-blue growth on potato. They occur in water. Bacillus canalis capsulatus (Mori).—Rods ‘9 to 1°6 » 1m width, capsulated. Colonies milk-white. The growth in the depth of gela- tine is similar to Friedlander’s pneumococcus. On agar the growth is viscid, and on potato it is yellowish. In broth a skin forms on the surface. They are pathogenic in mice. They occur in sewage. Bacillus canalis parvus (Mori). —Rods 2 to 5 » in length, ‘8 tol p in width. Colonies very minute, pale yellow. On the surface of gelatine they very slowly form a yellowish film. On agar the growth is dry and yellow. They are pathogenic in mice and guinea-pigs. They occur in sewage. ' Bacillus candicans (Frankland). —Very short rods and filaments. Colonies pure white. Inoculated in the depth of gela- tine they form isolated colonies in the track of the needle, and a white button on the free surface. On agar they form a greyish layer, and flourish on potato. They occur in soil. Bacillus capsulatus (Mori).— Oval forms and rods, sometimes encapsuled. Non-motile. Colonies white. _ Inoculated in the depth of gela- tine and agar a nail-shaped growth occurs. OF SPECIES. In broth they form a white | turbidity, and a white pellicle develops on the surface and on the sides of the vessels. On potato at 37°C. an abundant moist, yellowish, stringy growth is formed, with production of gas bubbles. They are pathogenic in mice and in rabbits if injected into- the pleural cavity. They occur in drain water. Bacillus capsulatus (Pfeiffer).. —Rods singly, in pairs, or in chains and in filaments. They have a well- marked capsule. Colonies white. Inoculated in gelatine they grow in the track of the needle, and form a white button on the free surface. On agar and on potato the growth is also white and very viscid, so- that it can be drawn out into long threads. They produce a fatal result in mice in two or three days, when inoculated subcutaneously. A. minute quantity of a broth culture injected into the peritoneal cavity of guinea-pigs will prove fatal in. thirty-six hours. The bacilli are found in the blood which is made viscid. They were isolated from a guinea- pig found dead. Bacillus capsulatus mucosus. (Fasching).—Rods 3 to 4 » in length, ‘75 to 1 » in width ; capsu-- lated. Colonies white. Cultures in gelatine resemble Friedlinder’s pneumococcus. They form gas. They produce a fatal result in mice in thirty-six hours. They were isolated from nasal mucus in cases of influenza. Bacillus capsulatus suis. (Smith).—Rods from 1:2 to 1°8 p in length and ‘8 to ‘9 » in width. There are three varieties of this bacillus having a closeresemblance to the pneumococcus of Friedlander. They were isolated from the in- testines of swine. Bacillus carabiformis (Kac- zynsky).—Rods short and slender. Colonies develop characteristic processes. DESCRIPTION Inoculated in the depth of gela- tine, the bacilli produce liquefaction and colour the liquid greenish- yellow. On agar they form a yellowish- white layer. They were isolated from the stomach of a dog. Bacillus carnicolor (Tils).— Rods 2 » long, and °5 yp broad. Singly actively motile. Spore- formation not observed. Colonies are in the form of cup- shaped depressions. Inoculated in the depth of gela- tine they grow rapidly along the whole track of the needle, forming a funnel-shaped area of liquefaction at the bottom of which there is a pale pink deposit. On potato they form slowly a dark flesh-coloured growth. They occur in water. Bacillus carotarum (A. Koch). —Rods ‘97 to 1:05 p» in lengthand filaments. Colonies white and circular. Inoculated in the depth of gela- tine the bacilli grow slightly in the track of the needle and abundantly on the surface. On agar they form a white, and on potato a faintly brown layer. They occur on boiled carrot and beet. Bacillus cavicida (Brieger).— Rods morphologically and in culti- vations similar to Bacillus coli com- munis, | Cultures: are said to be patho- genic in guinea-pigs. They were isolated from feces. Bacillus cavicida Havaniensis (Sternberg).—Rods 2 to 3 mw in length, and ‘7 » in width, singly and in pairs. Coionies are of a pale-straw colour. : Inoculated in the depth of gela- tine the bacilli form small trans- lucent pearl-like spherical colonies, and on the free surface the growth is limited. On potato the growth is at first thin and dirty yellow, and later gamboge yellow. Guinea-pigs inoculated subcuta- OF SPECIES. 505 neously die hours. They were isolated from the intestinal contents in a fatal case of yellow fever, by inoculation of guinea-pigs. Bacillus chromo-aromaticus.— Rods which liquefy gelatine and form a yellowish-white scum on the surface. On potato the growth is irides cent and brownish. In broth a scum forms on the surface and the broth is coloured greenish-blue. Cultures have an aromatic odour. They are said to produce pneu- monia and pleurisy in rabbits. They were isolated from a pig with post-mortem appearances of swine-fever. Bacillus circulans (Jordan).— Rods 2 to 5 w'in length and 1 p» in width, singly and in short chains. Colonies are brownish. Inoculated in the depth of gela- tine they liquefy the medium in the track of the needle, forming a conical cavity at its upper part. On agar they form a translucent. film. Milk is slowly coagulated. In broth they produce turbidity and a slimy deposit. They occur in water. Bacillus citreus cadaveris (Strassmann).—Rods °9 » in length, ‘6 w» in width, singly and in chains. Colonies pale yellow. Inoculated in the depth of gela- tine the bacilli form minute colonies along the track of the needle, and at its upper part liquefy the gela- tine and produce a yellow deposit. They were found in the blood after death. Bacillus cloace (Jordan).— Short rods ‘8 to 1:9 » in length, ‘7 to 1 » in width, singly and in pairs. Colonies circular, yellowish. Inoculated in the depth of gela- tine liquefaction occurs in the track of the needle, an iridescent scum forms on the surface, and there is an abundant deposit. ; On agar the growth is milk- in ten or twelve 506 white, and on potato yellowish- white. In broth they produce turbidity and ascum on the surface. They reduce nitrates, They occur in sewage. Bacillus coli communis (Escherich).—See p. 344, Bacillus coli similis (Stern- berg).—Rods 1 to 3 p in length, ‘4 to ‘5 p in width ; singly and inpairs. Colonies circular and pale brown in colour. In the depth of gelatine they form a scanty growth in the track of the needle, and on the free sur- face a translucent film with irregu- lar margins, On potato the growth is pale brown or dirty white. They were isolated from human liver after death. Bacillus constrictus (Zimmer- mann).—Rods from 1°5 to 6°5 pw in length, and ‘75 w in width. The rods are segmented. Colonies are circular, granular, and greyish-yellow. In the depth of gelatine they form a filament in the track of the needle and irregular yellow heaps on the free surface. On the surface of agar the growth consists of a yellow shining layer, and on potato the same colour is produced. They occur in water. Bacillus coprogenes fetidus (Schottelius).—Rods aboutas large as Bacillus subtilis, but shorter. They are non-motile. Spore-for- mation occurs when the bacilli have access to the air, but not in the animal body. In the depth of gelatine a fila- ment forms composed of yellow- ish compact colonies; and on the surface a fine transparent film; cultures emit a strong putrefactive odour. On potato they form alight grey, dry layer. : : Subcutaneous injection of small doses had no effect on mice and rabbits, but very large quantities produced a toxic effect in rabbits. Swine are not affected. DESCRIPTION OF SPECIES. They were found by Schottelius in the intestine in cases of swine erysipelas. — Bacillus coprogenes parvus (Bienstock).—Very short rods. On the surface of gelatine they form a very limited, almost in- visible, growth in the track of the needle. In mice they produce oedema and’ death in thirty-six hours, and in rabbits a local rash and death in eight days. They were isolated from human evacuations. j Bacillus crassus aromaticus (Taratoff).—Rods 3°5 to 5 yw long, 1:5 » in width ; constricted in the centre. Colonies appear in the form of cup-shaped depressions and pro- duce a fruit-like odour. In gelatine they grow in the track of the needle, and later produce a funnel-shaped area of liquefaction. They occur in well water. Bacillus crassus sputigenus (Kreibohm).—Short thick rods, sometimes curved; capsulated. Colonies greyish-white. Cultures in gelatine resemble those of Fried- lander’s pneumococcus. They are pathogenic in smallanimals. They were isolated from human sputum. Bacillus cuniculicida, Bacillus of Rabbit Septicemia (see p. 228). Bacillus cuticularis (Tils).— . Rods from 2 to 3 w in length, 3 to ‘5 » in width, and filaments. Colonies are yellow and the gela- tine is liquefied. In the depth of gelatine they produce liquefaction, and a skin forms on the surface. On potato the growth is slimy and yellow. ae: They occur in water. . Bacillus cuticularis albus (Taratoff).—Rods 3:2 » long, con- stricted in the middle. Actively motile. : Colonies are opalescent and bluish-white. Inoculated in the depth of gela- tine they form a white rosette- shaped growth on the surface and DESCRIPTION OF SPECIES. a shining white growth along the needle track which sends off long rounded processes. On agar, glycerine agar and blood serum they produce a luxuriant white ‘shining growth. Broth becomes turbid with a whitish deposit and pellicle. Qa potato there is a thick moist brown growth. They are found in water. Bacillus cyaneo-fuscus (Beyerinck).—Rods °2 to -6 p in length, and half their length in width. Motile. In the depth of gelatine they produce colonies in the track of the needle, which later develop a black pigment. In broth with 3 per cent. of peptone they produce a blue colour, changing to brown and finally black. They were isolated from cheese, size and glue. Bacillus cyaneo-phosphores- eens (Katz).—Rods 2°6 » in length, 1 » in width, singly, in pairs, and filaments. Colonies circular and brownish or greyish-yellow. Inoculated in the depth of gela- tine they form a grey-white fila- ment in the track of the needle and liquefaction follows at the upper part ; later a skin forms on the sur- face and a yellow deposit occurs at the bottom of the liquefied jelly which has a reddish-brown tinge. In broth a similar skin floats on the surface and the broth is turbid. On sterilised fish the growth is viscid and yellow. ; Cultures are phosphorescent, especially in media containing excess of common salt. They were isolated from sea- water at Sydney, and are possibly identical with Bacillus phosphores- ens of Fischer. Bacillus cyanogenus (Hueppe), —Bacterium syncyanum. Bacillus of Blue Milk.—Motile rods, 2°5 to short rods. ¥F, G. Spore-forming rods. H. forms (NEELSEN). ia) Cc A AiG wy gs dria ! f off 4 M7 i Fic. 200.—BacILLUS CYANOGENUS, x 650. A. Ac- tive rods. B. Rods in zooglea, C. Chain of D. Chain of cocci. E. Cocci stage. Involution- 3°5 w in length, and ‘4 » wide (Fig. 200). The rods after division may remain linked together, and form chains. Non-motile rods occur enveloped in a gelatinous capsule, and involution forms. Colonies appear after two days as small greyish-white points which gradually assume a moist appear- ance. The gelatine becomes steel- grey, throwing the white colonies into strong relief. In the depth of gelatine a whitish growth appears in the track of the needle near the upper part, and on the free surface, producing also a dark steel-blue discoloration of the jelly which spreads down- wards. On agar a greyish growth ap- pears, and the agar is coloured dark brown. , On potato a yellowish moist growth develops, the potato around it is stained grey-blue. Milk be- comes slightly alkaline and of a slate-grey colour, which on the addition of acid changes to an intense blue. Milk in which the 508 DESCRIPTION lactic acid bacillus is growing be- comes sky-blue from the first. They are non-pathogenic. They are present in blue milk. Bacillus cyanogenus (Jordan). —Rods 1:3 » in length, °8 p in width. Slightly motile. Colonies granular and irregular. They colour the surrounding gela- tine brown. Inoculated in the depth of gela- tine the bacilli produce a scanty growth in the track of the needle, and a film on the surface with coloration of the gelatine beneath it. On agar they form a white layer, and the jelly is coloured brown. On potato the growth is brown. They were isolated from sewage. Bacillus cystiformis (Clado).— Short slender rods. Motile. Colonies circular, yellowish, gra- nular. Inoculated in the depth of gela- tine there is a scanty growth in the track of the needle, and a white patch on the free surface. On agar the growth is yellowish- white. They were isolated from urine. Bacillus delicatulus (Jordan). —Rods 2 » long and 1 p» broad, often in pairs or short chains. Actively motile. Spore-formation not observed. Colonies at first whitish with a radiating edge. Later they liquefy the gelatine and the centres become dark. Inoculated in the depth of gela- tine they rapidly liquefy it and form a whitish pellicle and a brown deposit. On agar a greyish crinkled growth appears, which gradually becomes white and shining. On potato there is a grey flat growth. Milk is coagulated and becomes strongly acid. Broth is made turbid and a white serum and precipitate formed. They occur in sewage. Bacillus dentalis viridans (Miller).—Rods slightly bent, singly and in pairs. OF SPECIES. Colonies circular, yellowish and concentric. Inoculated in the depth of gela- tine they grow in the track of the needle and on the free surface, and the jelly is coloured green: On agar the growth is colourless. or slightly grey. Intraperitoneal injections in mice and guinea-pigs produce a fatal re- sult. Subcutaneous injectidns cause suppuration. They were isolated from caries. of the teeth. Bacillus dentriticus (Bordoni Uffreduzzi and Lustig).—Rods -85- to 2°8 w long, and ‘5 to °85 y» broad, singly and in zooglea. Motile. Spore-formation not observed. Colonies have an arborescent. appearance. Inoculated in the depth of gela- tine they form a circular raised growth at the point of puncture,. and white colonies along the needle track. The jelly is gradually liquefied. On agar and blood serum there is a scanty growth on the surface and an abundant growth in the track of the needle. Blood serum is liquefied after some time. Broth is rendered turbid; a white firm pellicle forms. On potato there is a thick moist ‘white growth, which later becomes yellow. Found in water. Bacillus devorans (Zimmer- mann).—Rods -99 » to 1:2 p in length, 74 » in width; singly, in pairs and in chains. Colonies are circular, granular, and grey, with periphery formed of radiating processes. In the depth of gelatine they produce a whitish filament and an excavation at the upper part, which may or may not contain liquefied jelly. On agar a greyish film is found. They do not grow on potato. They occur in water. Bacillus diffusus (Frankland). —Rods 1:7 yp in length, °5 p» in width ; singly, in pairs, and fila- ments. DESCRIPTION OF SPECIES. Colonies circular, bluish-green, with a granular nucleus and delicate irregular periphery. In the depth of gelatine there is scarcely any growth in the track of the needle, but a shining greenish- yellow film on the surface, and liquefaction below it. On agar the growth is faintly yellow. In broth they produce turbidity and a yellowish deposit. On potato the growth is yellow- ish. They occur in earth. Bacillus diphtherie (p. 332). Bacillus diphtherie colum- barum (p. 336). Bacillus dysodes(Zopf).—Cocci, Jong and short rods, and spores. They were observed in bread, making it greasy and unfit for food, and generating a penetrating odour resembling a mixture of pepper- mint and turpentine. "<< “ing Fic. 246.—Scuarer’s WARM STAGE. brass box (a). The box is pierced by a tubular aperture to admit light to the object, and has an exit tube (c'), by which the cooled water from the stage returns to be reheated by the flame g. Atd is a gas-regulator, so that a constant temperature at any desired point can be maintained. Stricker’s stage, in which warm water or steam can be used for heating, and by the employment of iced water also used for observing the effects of cold, is shown in Fig. 247. It consists of a hollow rectangular box, with a central opening (C) permitting the passage of light. The water makes its exit and entrance at the side tubes (a, a), and the temperature is indicated by a thermometer in front. 614 APPENDICES. A more complicated apparatus, combining both a warm stage and a gas chamber, is shown in Fig. 248. This consists of a rect- angular piece of ebonite (# #) fixed to a brass plate which rests on the stage of the microscope. On the upper surface of the ebonite is‘another brass plate (P), with an aperture (C’/) leading into a brass . C a” 1 T 1 T Fig. 247.—STRICKER’s Warm STAGE, tube closed below by a piece of glass. To heat the apparatus the copper wire B is placed on the tube a, and its extremity heated by the flame of the lamp. The nearer the lamp to the stage the higher the temperature, which is indicated by the thermometer (¢). To wv o alo z Fic. 248.—Stricker’s ComBinED Gas CHAMBER AND WaRM Stace. employ it as a gas chamber the wire B is laid aside, and the gas is conducted into the chamber by the tube a’, and escapes by the tube a. Microtome.—Schanze’s is much in favour in Germany, but Jung’s of Heidelberg, though a somewhat cumbrous instrument, is APPARATUS, MATERIAL, AND REAGENTS. 615 preferred by many workers. Smaller accessories, which should be within reach, are— A small can of sewing-machine oil. A soft rag and chamois leather, for wiping the knives immediately after use. Stone and leather, for setting and sharpening the same. Two or three camel’s-hair brushes. A freezing microtome is very useful: such as Swift’s, which is used by the author; and the method of embedding in celloidin is combined with the ordinary process of freezing. (B) Reacents anp Marerta, Empioyep IN THE PRocEssEs oF Harpenine, Decatciryinc, EmBrppine, Fixina anp Currine oF TissvEs. Alcohol, absolute. Bergamot oil. Celloidin. ‘Dissolved in equal parts of ether and alcohol. Cork, or stock of ready-cut corks. Ebnevr’s solution. A mixture in the following proportions :— Hydrochloric acid . : ‘ : : ‘ 5 Alcohol : : 3 3 ‘ é z : 100 Distilled water. 2 5 . 20 Chloride of sodium : : ; ; : 5 Formalin. Gelatine. Melted in a small porcelain capsule, and set aside ready to be re-melted when required for use. Glycerine gelatine (Klebs). Best well-washed gelatine. 10 Add distilled water, allow aointiae: to aril up, pour off excess of water, melt gelatine with gentle heat, add Glycerine ee a few dine of phensl for praca: 10 Gum. 616 APPENDICES. Kleinenberg’s solution. Saturated watery solution of picric acid ‘ . 100 Strong sulphuric acid . ‘ : 2 Filter, and add Distilled water i : ; . 3800 Miiller’s fluid. Bichromate of potash Sulphate of sodium : : ; ' : 1 Distilled water : : ‘ : . 100 Osmice acid. Distilled water ‘ : : . 100 Osmic acid . ; ‘ : ; : : D Paper trays (or small glass capsules). Paraffine. Spermaceti. Xylol. (C) Reacents ror Examining anp Srainina MicroscopicaL PREPARATIONS. . Acetic acid, strong. . Alcohol, absolute. . Alcohol, 60 per cent. . Aleohol, acidulated. ; Alcohol. : ; : : ‘ , 100 Hydrochloric acid. ; ‘ 1 em Oo bb Fe 5. Alum Carmine (Grenacher). Carmine . . : 5 1 Five per cent. soliton of — : 100 Boil twenty minutes; filter when veld, 6. Ammonia, strong. 7. Aniline. 8. Aniline water. Distilled water j j ; ; . 100 Aniline . i ‘ ; ; ; : 5 Shake well, and filter emulsion. APPARATUS, MATERIAL, AND REAGENTS, 617 9. Bismarck-brown. (a) Concentrated solution in equal parts of glycerine and water. (6) Aqueous solution. Bismarck-brown ‘ : ; 2 Alcohol . 3 : ; : 3 . 15 Distilled water ‘ B : : : . 85 10. Borax-carmine (Grenacher). Borax , ‘ : : : 2 Carmine . : 3 3 . : : F 5 Distilled water : ‘ é : : . 100 To the dark purple solution add a 5 per cent, solution of acetic acid until a red colour is produced ; set aside twenty-four hours ; filter, and add a drop of carbolic acid. : 11. Cedar oil. 12, Ehrlich-Biondi solution (Heidenhain). To Saturated aqueous solution of Orange. G. . 100 Add Saturated aqueous solution of Rubin. 8. . 20 Pr 5 “i Methyl-green. OO. 50 To the mixture : ‘ : : 5 j 1 Add water. : F . 100 13. Eosin. (a) Saturated alcoholic solution. (6) Aqueous solution. Distilled water. . 100 Eosin. ‘ ‘ ; : 5 14, Ether. 15. Fuchsine. (a) Saturated alcoholic solution. (6) Aqueous solution. Fuchsine . : : : 2 Alcohol . : ‘ : ‘ . Water . : : . 85 16, Gentian-violet. (a) Saturated alcoholic solution. 6) Aqueous solution. (6) Aq sh Gentian-violet . z : Distilled water ' : . 100 618 APPENDICES. 17. Gibbes’ solution, for double staining. Take of Rosaniline hydrochlorate . Methylene-blue Triturate in a glass mortar. Dissolve aniline oil . In rectified spirit and add slowly to the on Lastly, slowly add distilled water Keep in stoppered bottle. 18. Giycerine, pure. 19. Hematoxylin solution. ” -Hematoxylin . Alcohol . Distilled water Glycerine Alum 20. Iodine solution. - Iodine, pure Iodide of potassium . Distilled water 21. Iodine solution (Gram). Iodine ; Todide of potassium . Distilled water 22. Lithium-carmine solution (Orth). Saturated solution of carbonate of lithium Carmine . 23. Magenta solution (Gibbes). Magenta . Aniline oil Alcohol (sp. gr. 830) Distilled water 24. Methylene-blue. (a) Concentrated alcoholic solution. (6) Aqueous solution. Methylene-blue Alcohol . Water 15 85 APPARATUS, MATERIAL, AND REAGENTS, (c) Koch’s solution. Concentrated alcoholicsolution of methylene-blue Ten per cent. potash solution . ; Distilled water (d) Liffler’s solution. Concentrated alcoholic solution of methylene-blue Solution of potash, 1 to 10,000 25. Methyl-violet. (a) Concentrated alcoholic solution. (6) Aqueous solution. Methyl-violet . Distilled water (ce) Koch’s solution. Aniline water . Alcoholic solution of methyl: valele Absolute alcohol 26. Neelsen’s solution. Dissolve fuchsine In alcohol Add a. 5 per cent. watery solution of catbalts acid 27. Nitric acid, pure. 28. Orseille (Wedl). Dissolve pure ammonia-free orseille in Absolute alcohol Acetic acid Distilled water ; : until a dark red liquid seal Filter. 29. Picric acid. (a) Concentrated alcoholic solution. {2) Saturated aqueous solution. 30. Picro-carmine (Ranvier). Carmine . Distilled water Solution of ammonia . Triturate ; add cold saturated aliases af. picric acid 100 2:25 100 100 10 100 20 40 619 620 : APPENDICES. 31. Picro-lithium-carmine (Orth). To above-mentioned lithium-carmine solution add saturated solution of picric acid. . 23 32, Potash solution. (a) 1 to 3 per cent. (2) 10, » (c) G3 se yg 33. Safranine. (a) Concentrated alcoholic solution. (6) Watery solution. : : - 1 per cent. — 34, Sulphuric acid, pure. 35. Salt solution ‘ ‘ : ‘ . 0°8 per cent. 36. Turpentine. 37. Vesuvin. (a) Concentrated alcoholic solution. (6) Watery solution. Water, distilled. Water, sterilised. Distilled water can be kept for use in a wash bottle, or far better in a siphon apparatus. Sterilised water is convenient in plugged sterile test-tubes, which may be kept close at hand in a beaker, or tumbler, with a pad of cotton wool at the bottom. The numbered reagents can be conveniently arranged on shelves within easy reach. Alcoholic solutions of the aniline dyes and other special preparations should be kept in bottles with ground-glass stoppers. Aqueous solutions of the dyes may be kept in bottles with funnel filters, and the solution filtered before use. To both aqueous and alcoholic solutions a few drops of phenol, or a crystal of thymol, should be added as a preservative. For the rapid staining of cover- glass preparations, it is convenient also to have the most frequently used stains (fuchsine, methyl-violet) in bottles provided with pipette stoppers. (D) Reagents ror Movuntine anp Preservina PREPARATIONS. Acetate of potash. Concentrated solution. Asphalte lac. APPARATUS, MATERIAL, AND REAGENTS, 621 Canada balsam. Dissolved in xylol. Glycerine gum (Farrant’s solution), Glycerine. Water. Saturated solution of arsenious acid, Equal parts ; mix, and add of picked gum arabic half a part. Hollis’ glue. Zine-white. (EZ) Drawine anp PHorograPHic APPARATUS. Camera Lucida.—The camera lucida of Zeiss is an excellent instrument, though many prefer the pattern made by Nachet of Paris. Combined with the use of a micromillimeter objective, it affords also a simple method for the measurement of bacteria. For drawing microscopical appearances, and for illustrating microscopical specimens with or without the use of a camera lucida, the following materials should be within reach :— Pencils. Hiching pens. Prepared Indian ink. Water-colour paints and brushes. . Ordinary and tinted drawing paper and other usual accessories. Photo-micrographic Apparatus.—Zeiss of Jena, Seibert & Kraft of Wetzlar, Nachet of Paris, and Swift & Son of London, may all be recommended for constructing an arrangement in which the photographic camera is combined with the microscope. The best models have been described fully in the chapter on Photography of Bacteria. The accompanying figure (Fig. 249) illustrates a model in which the microscope is used in the vertical position. For illumination either sunlight or artificial light may be em- ployed. In the case of sunlight a heliostat is necessary to procure the best results; but as sunlight is not always available by day, and it is also more convenient for many to work at night, it is better to have recourse altogether to artificial light. Excellent results may be obtained with an ordinary paraffine lamp, or with magnesium, oxycalcium, or electric light. 622 . APPENDICES. a Fic. 249.—VeErticaL Micro-PHoToGRAPHIC APPARATUS. (F) Sreritisarion APPARATUS. Steam-steriliser.—A cylindrical vessel of tin about half a metre or more in height, jacketed with thick felt, and provided with a conical cap or lid (Fig. 250). The lid is also covered with felt, has handles on either side, and is perforated at the apex, to receive a thermometer. Inside the vessel is an iron grating or diaphragm about two-thirds the way down, which divides the interior into two chambers—the upper or ‘“ steam-chamber,” and the lower or ““water-chamber.” A gauge outside marks the level of the water in the lower chamber; this should be kept about two-thirds full. APPARATUS, MATERIAL, AND REAGENTS. 623 The apparatus stands upon three legs, and is heated from below with Fic. 250.—Kocu’s Steam- STERILISER. dicated by a thermometer inserted through a hole in the roof; in a second opening a gas regulator can be fixed. Test-tubes, flasks, funnels, cotton sterilised by exposure to a temperature of 150° C. for an hour or more. two or three Bunsen burners, or a Fletcher’s burner. It is employed for sterilising nutrient media in tubes or flasks, for cooking potatoes, or hastening the filtration of agar- agar, When the thermometer indicates 100° C. the lid is removed, and test-tubes are lowered in a wire basket by means of a hook and string, and the lid quickly re- placed. Potatoes or small flasks are lowered into the cylinder in a tin receiver with a perforated bottom, which rests upon the grating and admits of its contents being exposed to the steam. A larger model is shown in Fig. 33. Hot-air Steriliser.—A cubical chest of sheet iron with double walls, supported on four legs ; it may also be suspended on the wall of the laboratory, with a sheet of asbestos intervening (Figs. 251 and 252). It is heated with a rose gas-burner from below, and the temperature of the interior in- wool, etc., may be Fic. 252.—Section or Hor- Fic. 251.—Hor-arr STERILISER. AIR STERILISER. 624 APPENDICES. (G) Apparatus AND MArerIAL ror PREPARING AND SroRING Nourrient GELATINE AND NutTRIENT AGAR-AGAR. Water-bath.— A water-bath on tripod stand is required for boiling the ingredients of nutrient jellies and for general purposes. The lid may be conveniently composed of a series of concentric rings, so that the mouth of the vessel may be graduated to any size required. Test-tube Water-bath.—This consists of a circular rack for test-tubes within a water-bath. It is sometimes employed instead of the steam cylinder for sterilising nutrient jelly in tubes, by boiling for an hour for three successive days. Hot-water Filter.—A copper funnel with double walls, the inter- space between which is filled with hot water. A glass funnel fits in- side the copper cone, the stem of the glass funnel passing through and being tightly gripped by a per- forated caoutchouc plug, which fits in the opening at the apex of the cone. The water in the cone is heated by applying the flame of a burner to a tubular prolongation of the water-chamber. In a more recent model, as represented in Fig. 31, this prolongation is dis- pensed with, and the temperature is maintained by means of a circular burner which acts at the same time as a funnel ring. In Rohrbeck’s model the funnel of the filter is connected with a flask, from which the test-tubes can be easily filled with the liquid jelly (Fig. 253). Glass Vessels.—A number of glass vessels should be kept in stock according to requirements. Fic. 253.—Hort-watTer FILrerine APPARATUS WITH RING BURNER. Bohemian hard glass flasks are employed in several sizes, for boiling nutrient media. The conical forms are especially used in the larger sizes for storing nutrient jelly. Glass funnels, large and small, are necessary, not only in the processes of preparing nutrient jelly, but for filtering solutions of aniline dyes and for general purposes. APPARATUS, MATERIAL, AND REAGENTS. 625 A liberal supply of test-tubes should always be kept in stock, as they are not only employed for the tube-cultivations, but can be conveniently used for storing bouillon, sterilised water, etc. Cylindrical glasses graduated in cubic centimetres, 10 ccm., 100 cem., 500 ccm., are required for measuring the liquid ingredients of nutrient jelly, and also in preparing the various staining solutions. A large wide-mouthed glass jar, with a glass cover, is extremely useful. It must be padded at the bottom with cotton wool for containing a stock of tubes of sterilised nutrient jelly, and should be placed within reach on the working table. Balance and Weights.—A balance, with large pans and set of gramme weights, is constantly required. Cotton Wool.—The best or “ medicated” cotton wool should be procured. Gelatine.—The gelatine for bacteriological purposes must be of the very best quality (gold label). Agar-agar.—This is also called Japanese Isinglass; it consists of the shrivelled filaments of certain Alge (Gracilaria lichenoides and Gigartina speciosa). Peptonum Siccum. Table Salt.—Prepared table salt can be obtained in. tins or packets. Litmus Papers.—Blue or red litmus paper in cheque-books, for testing the gelatine mixture, etc. Carbonate of Soda.—aA bottle, containing a saturated solution of carbonate of soda, and provided with a pipette stopper, may be kept, especially for use in the preparation of nutrient jelly. Lactic Acid. Filter Paper.—For filtering gelatine, stout Swedish filter paper of the best quality is recommended. Flannel or Frieze.—This is employed as a substitute for, or combined with, filter paper in the preparation of nutrient agar- agar. (H) Apparatus FoR EMPLOYMENT OF Nourrienr Jeviy in Test-TUBE AND PLATE-CULTIVATIONS. Wire Cages.—These cages or crates are used for containing test-tubes, especially when they are to be sterilised in the hot-air steriliser ; or for lowering tubes of nutrient jelly into the steam- steriliser, etc. (Fig. 254). ; 0 626 APPENDICES. Test-tube Stands.—The ordinary wooden pattern, or the metallic folding stands, are called into use for holding cultivations. Pegged racks are also recommended for draining test-tubes after washing. Caoutchoue Caps.—These are caps for fitting over the cotton-wool plugs, and may be used in different sizes for test-tubes and stock-flasks. Platinum Needles.—A platinum needle for inoculating nutrient media, ex- Fic. 254.—Wire Cace amining cultivations, etc., consists of two or YOR Tes! TUBES: three inches of platinum wire fixed to the end of a glass rod. Several of these needles should be made with platinum wire of various thicknesses. A piece of glass rod, about seven inches long, is heated at the extreme point in the flame of Fic. 255.—Piatinum NEEDLES; STRAIGHT, HooKED, Looprep. a Bunsen burner, and a piece of platinum wire, held near one extremity with forceps, is then fused into the end of the rod. Some needles should be perfectly straight, and kept especially for Fic. 256.—Dame CHAMBER FOR PLATE-CULTIVATIONS. inoculating test-tubes of nutrient jelly. For other purposes the needles may be bent at the extremity into a small hook, and others provided with a loop (Fig. 255). APPARATUS, MATERIAL, AND REAGENTS. 627 Tripod Levelling-stand.—-A triangular wooden frame sup- ported upon three screw-feet which enable it to be raised or lowered to adjust the level. i wn Fic. 257.—APPARATUS EMPLOYED FOR PLATE-CULTIVATIONS. Tripod Stand ; Glass Dish, filled with cold or iced water; Sheet of Plate-glass ; Spirit Level, and Glass Bell. Large Glass Plate.—A piece of plate-glass, or a pane of ordinary window-glass, about a foot square. Spirit Level. Glass Bells and Dishes.—Shallow glass bells and dishes, for making a dozen or more damp chambers im (Fig. 256), and for completing the apparatus \ for pouring out liquefied nutrient al on i = vA glass plates or slides (Fig. 257). Iron Box.—A box of sheet-iron (Fig. 258), for containing glass plates during their sterilisation in the hot-air steriliser, and for storing them until required for use. Glass Plates.—Small panes of glass, about six inches by four. Not less than Fic. 258.—Box For three dozen are required for a dozen damp Guass Pratss. chambers. Glass Benches.—These are necessary for arranging the glass plates or slides in tiers in the damp chambers (Fig. 256). Metal Fic. 259.—G Lass BENcHES FOR GLASS PLATES OR SLIDES. shelves may be substituted for them, but the former are to be preferred. They can be easily made, in any number required, by 628 APPENDICES. cementing a little piece of plate-glass at either end of a glass slip (Fig. 259). Glass Rods.—One dozen or more glass rods, twelve to eighteen inches in length. They are employed for smoothly spreading out the liquefied nutrient gelatine or agar-agar on the glass plates, etc. Thermometers.—Two or three centigrade thermometers. (I) Apparatus FoR PREPARATION OF PoTATO-CULTIVATIONS, Israel’s Case.— Sterilising instruments in the flame of a Bunsen burner is most destructive. It is better, therefore, to have a sheet- iron case (Fig. 260) to contain potato-knives, scalpels and other in- struments, and to ster- ilise them by placing the case in the hot-air steriliser for an hour at 150° C. The box can be opened at the Fic. 260.—Isragu's Case. side, and each instru- ment withdrawn with a pair of sterilised forceps when required for ase Glass Dishes.—Several shallow glass dishes are required for preparing damp chambers for potato-cultivations (Fig. 261). The upper, being the larger, fits over the lower, and having no handle, admits of these damp chambers being placed, if necessary, in the incubator in tiers. The large size may also be used in the same way for plate-cultivations, Fie. 261.—Damp CuamBer ror Porato- Potato Knives.— A Sy tae common broad smooth-bladed knife set in a wooden handle is sold for this purpose. Scalpels.—Half a dozen scalpels, preferably with metal handles may be kept especially for inoculating sterilised potatoes. Brush.—A common stout nail-brush, or’ small scrubbing-brush, is essential for cleansing potatoes. i APPARATUS, MATERIAL, AND REAGENTS. 629 (J) APPARATUS FOR PREPARATION oF SoLIDIFIED STERILE Bioop-sERUM. Glass Jar.—A tall cylindrical glass jar, on foot, with a broad ground stopper, for receiving blood. Pipette.—An ordinary or graduated pipette, for transferring the serum from the jars to sterile test-tubes or glass capsules. Koch’s Serum Ster- iliser.—A cylindrical case, with double walls forming an interspace to contain water, closed with a lid, also double- walled and provided with a tubular prolongation of the enclosed water-chamber (Fig. 262). The water in the cylinder is heated from below, and that in the lid by means of the prolongation. In the centre of the cylinder is a column which communicates with the water- chamber of the cylinder, and from it pass four partitions, which serve to support the test-tubes. Fic. 262.—Kocw’s Serum STERILISER. In the lid are three openings, one of which communicates with the water-chamber in the lid by which the latter is filled, and into which a thermometer is then fixed. In the centre an opening admits a thermo- meter, which passes into the central pipe of the cylinder ; through a third opening a thermometer passes to the cavity of the cylinder. The cylinder and cover are jacketed with felt, and the apparatus is supported on iron legs. Koch’s Serum Inspis- sator.—A shallow tin case Fic. 263.—Srerum INSPISSATOR. with glass cover, both case and cover jacketed with felt (Fig. 263) 630 APPENDICES. The case is double-walled, and the water contained in the interspace is heated from below. It is supported on four legs, and the two front ones move in grooves in the case, so that the latter can be placed obliquely at the angle required and secured in position by screw-clamps. It is employed for coagulating sterile liquid serum, and for solidifying nutrient agar-agar so as to give them a sloping surface. 7 Hueppe’s Serum Inspissator.—By the new process the serum is obtained with every possible precaution, and solidified at once in Hueppe’s apparatus (Fig. 44). Glass Capsules.—Small capsules or hollowed-out cubes of crystal glass are employed for cultivation on solid blood-serum, on nutrient gelatine, and on agar-agar. They may be, procured of white and blackened glass, and are provided with glass slips as covers. : (K) APPARATUS FoR STORING, AND FoR CuLtivarions 1n, Liquip Mepia. Lister’s Flasks.—Lister devised a globe-shaped flask with two necks—a vertical anda lateral one, The lateral one is a bent spout, tapering towards its constricted extremity. When the vessel is restored to the erect position after pouring out some of its contents, a drop of liquid remains behind in the end of the nozzle, and prevents the regurgitation of air through the spout. A cap of cotton wool is tied over the orifice, and the residue in the flask kept for future use. The vertical neck of the flask is plugged with sterilised cotton wool in the ordinary way (Fig. 60). Sternberg’s Bulbs.—Sternberg advocates the use of a glass bulb, provided with a slender neck drawn out to a fine point and hermetically sealed (Fig. 62). Aitken’s Test-tube.—This is an ingenious device for counter- acting the danger of entrance of atmospheric germs on removal from the ordinary test-tube of the cotton-wool plug. Each test-tube is provided with a lateral arm tapering to a fine point, which is hermetically sealed (Fig. 62). Drop-culture Slides.—-About a dozen or more thick glass slides with a circular excavation in the centre are required for drop-cultures (Fig. 48). Vaseline.—A small pot of vaseline with a camel’s-hair brush should be reserved especially for use in the preparation of drop- cultures. APPARATUS, MATERIAL, AND REAGENTS, 631 Bulbed Tubes.—Glass vessels, such as test-tubes, flasks and pipettes, which are used in dealing with liquid media, have already been mentioned under other headings; but bulbed tubes, Pasteur’s bulbs, and various other forms are also required for special experiments, (L) Apparatus For IncuBATION. There are several forms of incubator, each of which has its advocates. They are mostly rectangular chests, with glass walls front and back, or in front y only. A cylindrical model is preferred by some. Two only will be described here—D’Arsonval’s and Babes’. The former admits of very exact regulation of temperature, and the latter is a very practical form for general use. D’Arsonval’s Incu- bator.—The “twee DArsonval” (Fig. 264) is a very efficient apparatus, and is provided with a heat- regulator, which enables the temperature to he maintained with a mini- mum variation. It consists of a cylindrical copper vessel, with double walls, enclosing a wide interspace for containing a _ large volume of water. The roof = of the water-chamber is Fic. 264.—D’Arsonvat’s IncupaTor. oblique, so that the wall rises higher on one side than on the other. This admits of the inter- space being completely filled with water. At the highest point is an opening fitted with a perforated caoutchouc stopper, through which a glass tube passes. The mouth of the cylinder itself is horizontal, and is closed by a lid, which is also double-walled to contain water. In the lid are four openings: one serves for filling its 632 APPENDICES. water-chamber, aud the others for thermometers and for regulating the air supply in the cavity of the cylinder. The cylinder is con- tinued below by a cone, also double-walled, and there is a perforated grating at the line of junction of the cylinder and cone. The cone terminates in a projecting tube provided with an adjustable ventilator. The apparatus is fixed on three supports united to one another below. One of them is utilised for adjusting the height of the heating apparatus. Situated above this leg is the heat- regulating apparatus (Fig. 265), attached to a circular, lipped aperture in the outer wall of the incubator. To the lip is fixed with six screws the corresponding lip of a brass box, with a tightly-stretched diaphragm of indiarubber inter- vening. Thus the diaphragm separates the cavity of the box from the water in the interspace of the incubator. The cap of the box, Fic. 265.—Scuiosine’s MEMBRANE wel sonews 4 as bored im the REGULATOR. centre for the screw-pipe, by which the gas is supplied. Another pipe entering the box from below is connected with the gas-burners. Around the end of the screw-pipe a collar loosely fits, and is pressed against the diaphragm by means of a spiral wire spring. Close to the mouth of the screw-pipe a small opening exists, so that the gas supply to the burners is not entirely cut off even when the diaphragm completely occludes the mouth of the screw-pipe. To work the apparatus the tube and plug must be removed, and the water-chamber filled completely with distilled or rain water at the temperature required. The caoutchouc plug is replaced and the tube placed in position. Gas enters through d (Fig. 265), and passes through the opening at its extremity into the chamber of the box. Thence it passes through the vertical exit which is connected with the gas-burners. As the temperature rises the water rises in the tube, and at the same time exercises a pressure on every part of the walls of the incubator, and hence on the diaphragm. In consequence of this, the diaphragm bulging outwards approaches the end of the tube d, and gradually diminishes the gas supply. Asa result the temperature falls, the water contracts and sinks in the tube, and the diaphragm receding from d, the gas supply is again increased. By adjusting the position of the tube d to the diaphragm, any required temperature within the limits of the working of the apparatus can be regulated to the tenth of a degree—provided (1) that the gas supply is rendered independent of fluctuations of pressure APPARATUS, MATERIAL, AND REAGENTS. 633 by means of a gas-pressure regulator ; (2) that the height of the water in the tube is controlled daily by the withdrawal or addition of a few drops of ca distilled water; and (3) that the apparatus | is kept in a place with as even a tempera- ture as possible, and sheltered from currents of air. The burners in Fig. 264 are protected with mica cylinders similar to the burner represented in Fig. 266. The flames of G2 these burners can be turned down to the smallest length without danger of extinction, and the temperature may be regulated very satisfactorily without using the heat-regulator just described, if the gas first passes through = a pressure-regulator (Fig. 269). To provide against the danger resulting from accidental extinction of the gas, Koch has devised a self-acting apparatus (Fig. 267), which, simultaneously with the extinction of the flame of the burner, shuts off the supply of gas. : IG. 266.—GAS-BURNER PROTECTED WITH Mica CYLINDER. Fy | a tll Il eran BF) Fic. 267.—Kocw’s Sarety BuRNER. Babés’ Incukator.—The pattern used by Babés is a very simple one, and may be recommended for economy and efficiency (Fig. 268). It consists of a double-walled chest with sides and roof jacketed with felt. Water fills the interspace between the walls, and on the roof are two apertures—one for a gas-regulator and the other 634 for a thermometer. Fic. 268.—Basks’ IncuBATOR. APPENDICES. In front the chest is closed in by a sheet of felt, a glass door, and a sliding glass panel. The apparatus can be suspended on the wall or supported on legs, and is heated from below by means of protected burners. The gas should pass first through a pressure-regulator, and then through a thermo-regulator to the burners. Moitessier’s Gas - pressure Regulator.—This apparatus is best explained by reference to the dia- gram (Fig. 269). In the bottom of the cylinder (A) are the entrance (h) and exit (2) gas-tubes. The tap (m) regulates the size of the flame. The cover (x 7) roofs in the cylinder (4). The bell (8) supports, by means of e and f, the ball valve (d), which The gas, entering by &, passes through the lies in the cover (c c). valve (d), and is thence conducted by the tube @ to the tube 7. The bell (B) and the weighted dish (A) are screwed on to the connecting- rod (g). To diminish as much as_ possible the friction of g in 2, g only touches z~ by three projecting ridges. Section of i and g is shown at s. To put the apparatus in use it is first levelled, then h is screwed off, and the cover (m ) removed. A mixture of two parts of pure acid-free glycerine to one of distilled water is poured into the cylinder until it flows out at gq, which is then closed, and the cover (n 1) replaced. Fic. 269.—MoIressigr’s GAS-PRESSURE. REGULATOR. The manometers are filled with coloured water, and & and 1 APPARATUS, MATERIAL, AND REAGENTS. 635 connected with the entrance and exit gas tubing respectively. The pressure of the incoming gas raises the bell (B) ; and with it the valve (d) is raised towards the opening at cc. The weight (h), which is replaced on g, by its downward pressure counteracts this upward pressure of the gas and opens the valve (cc). Thus the flame is best regulated in the morning, when the pressure is at a minimum; then supposing an increase of pressure occurs, the weight of /, is overbalanced, B is raised, and with it d,and the gas supply pro- portionately diminished by the gradual closing of the valved opening. Reichert’s Thermo-regulator.—This regulator (Fig. 270) consists of three parts—a hollow T-piece, a stem and a bulb. The T-piece fits like a stopper in the upper widened portion of the stem. One arm of the T is open and connected with the gas supply; the vertical portion terminates in a small orifice, and is also provided with a minute lateral opening. The stem is provided with a lateral arm, and this arm, the stem, and the bulb contain mercury. The regulator is fixed in the roof of the incubator, so that the bulb projects either into the interior of the incubator or \ into the water-chamber. When the incubator reaches the required temperature, the mercury is forced up by means of the screw in the lateral arm, until it Fie. 270.— closes the orifice at the extremity of the vertical ar portion of the JT. The gas which passes through ggcprator. the lateral orifice is. sufficient to maintain the apparatus at the required temperature. If the temperature of the incubator falls, the mercury contracts, and gas passing through the terminal orifice of the JT increases the flame of the burner, and the temperature is restored. Page’s Thermo-regulator resembles the above, but instead of the T-piece there are two pieces of glass-tubing. The outer tubing envelops the upper part of the stem of the regulator, and admits of being raised or lowered. The upper end of this tubing is closed by a cork, which is perforated to admit the narrow glass- tubing, which represents the vertical arm of the T, passing within the stem of the regulator. This has a terminal and a lateral opening, and is the means of entrance for the gas. This regulator is adjusted by noting when the thermometer indicates the desired temperature, and then pushing down the outer tube until the terminal opening of the inner tube, which is carried down with it, is obstructed by the mercury. 636 : APPENDICES. Meyer’s Thermo-regulator is represented in Fig. 271. No. I. shows the construction of the regulator : its inner tube terminates in an oblique opening, and is also provided with a minute lateral perture, which prevents the complete shutting off of the gas supply. =| ————S Sao BPR ee eee oe oe Fic. 271.—Meyer’s THERMO-REGULATOR. No. IT. illustrates the method of introducing the mercury by suction through a filling tube, which is substituted for the inner tube of the regulator. No. III. represents Frinkel’s modification of the same instrument. (M) Inocutatine anp Dissectina InsrrumENTS AND APPARATUS In Common Ussz. Mouse-cages.—As mice are the animals most frequently employed for experimental purposes, mouse-cages have been APPARATUS, MATERIAL, AND REAGENTS. 637 especially introduced, consisting simply of a cylindrical glass jar with a weighted wire cover. Dressing-case.—A small surgical dressing-case, with its usual accessories—forceps, knives, small, straight and curved scissors, needles, silk, and so forth—will serve for most purposes. Pravaz’ Syringe.—Koch’s modification of Pravaz’ syringe admits of sterilisation by exposure to 150° C. for a couple of hours. Special Instruments and Material.—Instruments required for special operations, and the materials necessary for strict anti- septic precautions, need not be detailed here.* Dissecting-boards.—Slabs of wood in various sizes, or gutta- percha trays, provided with large-headed pins, are employed for ordinary purposes. Dissecting-case.— A dissecting-case, fitted with scalpels, scissors, hooks, ete., should be reserved entirely for post-mortem examinations. Fic. 272.—SipHon Borris, witH FLEXIBLE Tube, Guass NozzLE, AND A Mour’s PINcHcock. (N) Genera Laroratory ReEqQuisitss. Siphon Apparatus.—Two half-gallon or gallon glass bottles, with siphons connected with long flexible tubes provided with glass nozzles and pinchcocks (Fig. 272), should be employed for the * Vide Cheyne, Antiseptic Surgery. 1882. 638 APPENDICES. following purposes :—One is used to contain distilled water, with the nozzle hanging down conveniently within reach of the working table; the other is to contain a solution of carbolic acid (1 in 20), and may be placed so that the nozzle hangs close to the lavatory sink or basin. The former replaces the use of the ordinary wash- bottle, in washing off surplus stain from cover-glasses, etc., and the latter is conveniently placed for disinfection of vessels and hands after cleansing with water. They should be placed on the top of a cupboard or on a high shelf. Desiccator.—The desiccator (Fig. 273) consists of a porcelain pan containing concentrated sulphuric acid and covered over with a bell-glass receiver. The sheet of plate-glass upon which the pan rests is ground upon its upper surface, and the rim of the glass bell is also ground and well greased. In the centre of the pan is a column supporting a circular frame, which is covered with wire gauze. Slices of potatoes, upon which micro-organisms have been cultivated, are rapidly dried by the action of sulphuric acid in confined air. A detailed description of other kinds of apparatus commonly in use in a research laboratory—-such as the various forms of apparatus for filtering cultures in liquids, and the reagents necessary for special chemical investigations—must be sought for elsewhere. Much information may be obtained about the most recent improve- ments in bacteriological, chemical and physical apparatus by reference to manufacturers’ catalogues.* mei lL Fie. 273. —DesiccaTor. * All bacteriological apparatus may be obtained from Berlin from Dr. Muencke, 58, Louisen Strasse, or Dr. Hermann Rohrbeck, 24, Karlstrasse. Dr. George Griibler, Leipzig, is recommended for special staining reagents. In London, chemicals and bacteriological apparatus can be obtained from Becker & Co., Hatton Wall, or from Baird & Tatlock, 14, Cross Street, Hatton Garden, E.C. Mr. Baker, of High Holborn, W.C., is recommended as the agent for microscopes and objectives by Continental makers, including Zeiss’ apochromatic objectives. APPENDIX V. BIBLIOGRAPHY CHAPTER I. HISTORICAL INTRODUCTION. Andry, De la Génération des Vers dans le Corps de l’Homme, 1701. Charlton Bastian, Proc. Royal Soc. 1872. Bonnet, Considérations sur les Corps orga- nisés, 1768. Davaine, Compt. Rend., T. lviii. and lix. Gleichen, Dissertation sur la Génération, 1778. Hill, Essays in Natural History and Philosophy. Kircher, Ars magna lucis et umbre, 1646. Koch, Beitrige zur Biologie der _Pflanzen, 1876. Lister, Pharmaceut. Journal and Transact., 1877. Miiller, Animalia infusoria, 1786. Pasteur, Compt. Rend., 1859, 1880; Etude sur la Maladie des Vers-d-soie, 1870. Plenciz, Opera Medico-Physica, 1762. Schréder and Von Dusch, Ann. der Chem. und Pharm, vol. lxxxix. Schiiltze, Poggen- dorff’s Ann., vol. xxxix. Schwann, Poggendorff’s Ann., vol. xli. Tyndall, Essays on floating matter of the air, 1881. CHAPTER II. MORPHOLOGY AND PHYSIOLOGY OF BACTERIA. MoRPHOLOGY. Baumgarten, Lehrbuch der Pathologischen Mykologie, 1890. Biedert, Virch. Archiv, Bd. 100, 1885, Billroth, Unters. iiber d. Veg. Form der Cocco- bacteria septica, 1874. Brefeld, Botanische Untersuch. tiber Schimmelpilze, Heft 1, 1881. Cohn, Beitriige zur Biologie der Pflanzen, Bd. I., 1872, 1875. Cornil and Babés, Les Bactéries, 1885. Dallinger and Drysdale, Monthly Micro- scop. Journ., 1875. De Bary, Verg. Morph. und Liolog. der Pilze, Mycetozoen, und Bacterien, 1884; Vorlesungen tiber Bacterien, 1885. Dujardin, Histoire Naturelle des Zoophytes, 1841. Ehrenberg, Die Infusionsthierchen als Volkom. Organism, 1838. Fisch, Biolog. Centralbl., V., 1885. Fliigge, Handbuch der Hygiene, 1883; Die Micro-organismen, 2nd Edition, 1886. Gram, Fortsch der Med., IL, No. 6. Grove, Synopsis of the Bacteria and Yeast Fungi, 1884. Hallier, Die Pflanzlichen Parasiten, 1866. Hauser, Ueber Faulniss Bacterien, 1885. Hueppe, Die Formen der Bakterien, 1885. Lankester, Quart. Journ. Microscop. Science, 1873. Leunis, Synopsis d. Pflanzenkunde : 639 640 APPENDICES. Hanover, 1877. Lister, Quart. Journ. Microscop. Science, 1873. Lutz, Fortschr. d. Med., 1881. Marpmann, Die Spaltpilze, 1884. Miller, Deut. Med. Woch., 1884. Nageli, Die Niederen Pilze, 1877. Neelsen, Biol. Centralbl., IIL, No. 18, 1883. Sachs, Text-book of Botany, 1882. Wan Tieghem, Compt. Rend., 1879; Traité de Botanique, 1883. Zopf, Die Spaltpilze, 1885. GENERAL BIOLOGY. Arloing, Archiv de Physiol., 1886. Bordoni-Uffreduzzi, Fortschr. d. Med., 1886. Cheyne, Brit. Med. Journ, 1886. Cohn and Mendelsohn, Beitr. z. Biol. d. Pflanzen, Bd. III., Heft 1. Cortes, Compt. Rend., T. 99, p. 385, 1884. Downes, Proc, Roy. Soc., 1886. Duclaux, Compt. Rend., 1885. Engelmann, Arch. f. d. Ges. Physiologie, Bd. 26, 1881; Botan. Zeitg., 1882. Fodor, Archiv f. Hygiene, 1886. Hauser, Archiv f. Exper. Patholog. u. Pharmacologie, 1886. Hofmann, Allgem. Med. Centralbl., 8. 605. Liborius, Zeitschrift f. Hygiene, 1886. Nageli, Die Niederen Pilze: Miinchen, 1877; Unters. iiber Niedere Pilze: Miinchen, 1882. Nencki, Virchow’s Archiv, 1879 ; Beitrige zur Biol. der Spaltpilze : Leipzig, 1879; Ber. d. Deutschen Chem. Gesellsch., 8. 2605, 1884, Regnard, Compt. Rend., T. 98, p. 744, 1884. Tumas, St. Petersb. Med. Wochenschr., 1879. Wyssokowitseh, Zeitschrift f. Hygiene, 1886. CHROMOGENIC BACTERIA. Babés, Biolog. Centralbl., Bd. 2, 1882. Chabert and Fromage, D’une Altéra- tion du Lait de Vache, désignée sous le Nom du Lait Bleu, 1880. Charrin, Communication faite a la Société Anatomique, 1884. Cohn and Miflet, Cohn’s Beitriige zur Biol. d. Pflanzen, Bd. III., Heft 1, 1879. Eberth, Centralbl. f. d. Med. Wissensch., 18638. Ehrenberg, Micr. Prodigiosus, Verhandl. d. Berl. Acad., 1839, Fordos, Compt. Rend. de l’Acad. de Sc., 1860. Frank, Cohn’s Beitr. z. Biol. d. Pflanzen, Bd. I., Heft 3, 1875. Gessard, De la Pyocyanine et de son Microbe, 1882 ; Ann. de l'Institut Pasteur, T. iv. Gielen, Mag. f. Ges, d. Thierheilkunde, 1852. Girard, Unters. tiber Blauen Hiter; Chirurg. Centralbl., II., 1875; Revue des Sc., T. 5, 1877. Hermstadt, Ueber die Blaue und Rothe Milch., 1833. Hugues, Echo Vétérinaire, 1884. Klein, Quart. Journ. of Micr. Sc., Vol. 15, 1875. Lankester, Quart. Journ. of Micr. Sc., Vol. 13, 1873, 1876. Liieke, Arch. f. Klin. Chir., 1862. Mosler, Virchow’s Archiv, Bd. 43, 1868. Neelsen, Cohn’s Beitr. z. Biologie d. Pflanzen, Bd. III., Heft 2, 1880. Schréter, Cohn. Beitr. z. Biol. der Pflanzen, Bd. I., Heft. 2, 1872. Steinhoff, Neue Ann. d. Mecklenb. Landw. Ges., 1838. Wernich, Cohn’s Beitrige zur Biol. d. Pflanzen, Bd. III., Heft 1, 1879. Van Tieghem, Bull. de la Soc. Bot. de France, 1880, ZYMOGENIC BACTERIA AND FERMENTATION. Béchamp, Compt. Rend., T. 60, p. 445, 1865; T. 93,1881. Boutroux, Compt. Rend., T. 86, 1878. Brefeld, Landwirthsch. Jabresber., Bd. 3, 1874; Bd. 4, 1875; Bd. 5, 1876. Cienkowski, Die Gallertbildungen d. Zuckerrtibensaftes, 1878. Colin, Bull. de l’Acad. de Méd., 1875. Dubrunfaut, Compt. Rend., T..73, 1871. Duclaux, Théses présentées 4 Ja Faculté de Paris, 1865. Dumas, Compt. Rend., T. 75. Nr. 6, 1872; Ann. de Chim, et de Phys., 1874. Eriksson, Unters. aus. d. Botan.; Institut in Tiibingen, Heft 1, 1881. Feltz and Ritter, Journ. de l’Anat. et Phys., 1874. Fermi, Centralb. f. Bact., 1891. Fitz, Berichte d. Chem. Ges., Bd. 6, 8. 48, 1875; Bd. 10, p. 216, 1878; BIBLIOGRAPHY. 641 Bd. 11, pp. 42 and 498, and Bd. 12, p. 474, 1879; Bd. 13, p- 1309, 1880; Bd. 15, p. 857, 1882; Bd. 16, p. 844, 1883; Bd. 17, p. 1188,.1884, Fleck, Ber. d. Chem. Centralst.. Dresden, 1876. Frankland, Cantor Lectures, 1899. Gessard, De la Pyocyanine et de son Microbe. Guiard, Thése de Paris, 1883. Hallier, Gihrungserscheinungen, 1867. Hansen, Untersuch. aus. d. Prax. der ‘Gihrungsindustrie, 1890, 1892, Harz, Grundaziige der alkoholischen Gih- rungslehre, 1877. Hiller, Centralbl. f. d. Med. Wiss., 8. 53,1874. Hofmann, Aerztl. Verein 2u Wien, Mai 1873; Allgem. Med. Centralbl., §. 605, 1873. Hoppe-Seyler, Medic.-Chem. Untersuchungen, Heft 4, 1871. Hueppe, Mitth. a. d. Ges. Amt, Bd. ii., 1884; Deut. Med. Woch., 1884, Jacksch, Zeitschr. f. Physiol. Chemie, Bd. 5, 1881. Jorgensen, Microorg. of Ferment Trans., 1893. Karsten, Chemismus der Pflanzenzelle, 1869. Kern, Bull. de la Soc, Imp. des Naturalistes de Moskau, No, 3, 1881. Krannhals, Deut. Arch. f. Klin. Med., Bd. 35, 1884. Ladureau, Compt. Rend., T. 99, p. 877, 1884. Lépine and Roux, Compt. Rend., T. 101, 1885. Leube, Virch. Arch., Bd. 100, §.,540, 1885. Lex, Centralbl. f. d. Med. Wiss., §. 291, 1872. Liebig, Verhandl. der Miinchener Akad. d. Wiss., 1861; 5 Nov. 1869; Ueber Gihrung, Quelle der Muskel- kraft und Ernaéhrung; Leipzig u. Heidelberg, 1870. Lister, The Pharmae. Journ. and Transact., 1877. Mayer, Lehrbuch der Gahrungschemie; 2 Aufl., 1876. Monoyer, Thése de Strassburg, 1862. Miller, Journ. f. Prakt. Chem., 1860. Musculus, Ber. d. Chem. Ges., 8. 124, 1874; Compt. Rend., T. 78, 1874. Nageli, Theorie der Gahrung: Miinchen, 1879. Pasteur, Annal. de Chim. et de Phys., III. Sér., T. 58, 1860; Compt. Rend., 1860, 1861, 1863, 1864, 1871, 1872; Bull. de la Soc. Chim., 1861; Ann. de Chim. et de Phys., T. 64, 1862; Etudes sur le Vin, 1866; Bull. de l’Acad. de Méd., No. 27, 1876; Etudes sur la Biére, 1876. Pasteur and Joubert, Compt. Rend., T. 83,1876. Popoff, Botan. Jahresber., 1875. Prazmowski, Untersuchungen iiber die HEntwicklungs- geschichte und Fermentwirkung einiger Bakterien, 1880. Richet, Compt. ‘Rend., T. 88, 1879. Scheibler, Zeitschr. f. Riibenzuckerindustrie, 1874. Schiitzenberger, Die Gihrungserscheinungen, 1874. Sheridan Lea, Journ. of Physiology, 1885. Trécul, Compt. Rend., T. 61, 1865; T. 65, 1867; Ann. des Se., Sér. 7, T. 7, 1867. Tyndall, Compt. Rend., T. 58, 1864; Essays on the Floating Matter of the Air, 1881. Van Tieghem, Compt. Rend., 1864, 1874, 1879, 1880, 1884. PHOTOGENIC BACTERIA. Beyerinck, Archiv Neerland, XXIII. Fischer, Zeitschr. f. Hygiene, 1887 ; Centralbl. f, Bakteriolog., 1888. Forster, Centralbl. f. Bakteriolog., 1887. Girard, Compt. Rend., 1890. Girard and Billet, Compt. Rend., 1889. Katz, Centralbl. f. Bakteriol., 1891. Lehmann, Centralbl. f. Bact., 1889. Ludwig, Centralbl. f. Bact., 1887. CHAPTER III. EFFECT OF ANTISEPTICS AND DISINFECTANTS ON BACTERIA. Arloing, Cornevin and Thomas, Lyon Méd., 1883. Blyth, Proe. Roy. Soc., 1885. Buchholz, Ueber das Verhalten von Bakterien zu einigen Antiseptics, 1876; Arch. f. Exp. Pathol., Bd. 7,1877. Chairy, Compt. Rend., 1884. Chamber- ‘land and Roux, Compt. Rend., 1883. Chauveau, Compt. Rend., 1883, 1884. Cheyne, Antiseptic Surgery, 1882. Colin, Compt. Rend., T. 99, ie De la 642 APPENDICES. €roix, Arch. f, Exp. Pathol., Bd. 13, 1881. Dujardin-Beaumetz, Bull. de l’Acad, de Méd.-de Paris, 1884, Eidam, Cobn’s Beitr. zur Biol., Bd. I., Heft 3, 1875, Fischer, Berl. Klin. Woch., 1882. Fischer and Proskauer, Mitth, a. d. Kaiser. Ges. Amt, Bd. IJ., 1884, Frank, Ueber Desinfection von Abtrittsgruben, 1885. Frisch, Sitzungsber. d. Wiener Akad., Bd. 75 u. 80, 1877. Giirtner and Plagge, Deut. Med. Woch., 1885, Haberkorn, Das Verhalten von Harnbakterien gegen einige Antiseptica ; Dissert. Dorpat., 1879. Handford, Brit. Med. Journ., 1885, Heydenreich, Compt. Rend., T. 98, 1884. Hoffmann, Experimentelle Unter- suchungen iiber die Wirkung der Ameisensiiure Diss. Greifswald, 1884. Hueppe, Mittheilg. a. d. Kaiserl. Ges. Amt, Bd. 1., 8. 341, 1881 ; Deut. Militar- Grztl. Zeitschr., 1882. Koch, Cohn’s Beitr. zur Biol. der Pflanzen, Bd. II, Heft 2, 1876 ; Mitth. a. d. Ges, Amt, Bd. I., 8. 234, 1881. Koch and Gaffky, Arbeit, a. d. K. Gesundh. Amt, 1885. Koch, Gaffky and Loffler, Mitth. a. d. Kaiserl. Ges. Amt, Bd. I., 8. 322, 1881. Koch and Wolffhiigel, Mitth. a. d. Kaiserl. Ges. Amt, Bd. I., §. 301, 1881. Konig, Chirurg. Centralbl., 1885. Laillier, Ann. d’Hygiéne, 1883. Larrivé, L'Eau Oxygénée: Thése de Paris, 1883. Lassar, Deut. Med. Woch., 1880. Lebedeff, Arch. de Physiol. Norm. et Pathol., 1882. Maly and Emich, Sitzungsber. d. Kais. Akad. d. Wiss. zu Wien.. Jan, 1883. Marié-Davy, Revue d’Hygiéne, 1884. Merke, Virchow’s Archiv, Bd. 81, 1880. Meyer, Ueb. d. Milchsiiureferment u. sein Verhalten gegen Antiseptica, 1880. Mignet, Annuaire de Observatoire de Montsouris, 1884- Miquel, Semaine Médicale, 1883. Moérscheli, Deut. Med. Woch., 1880. 'Nageli,. Die Niederen Pilze, 1877, Pasteur, Ann. d’Hyg., 1880; La Vaccination Char- bonneuse, 1883. Perroncito, Arch. Ital. de Biol., 1883. Pictet and Young,. Compt. Rend., T. 98, 1884. Plaut, Desinfection der Viehstalle, 1884. Reinl, Prager Med. Woch., Nr.10 u. 11,1885, Rochefort, Herscher, Revue d’Hygieéne,. 1884, Rossbach, Berl. Klin. Woch., 1884. Schede, Sammlung Klin. Vortrige, Nr. 25,1885. Schill and Fischer, Mitth. a. d. Kaiserl. Ges. Amt, Bd. II. 1884. Schnetzler, Archiv de Géneve, 1884. Schréter, Cohn’s Beitr. zur. Biol, der Pflanzen, Bd. I., Heft 3, 1875. Schultz, Deut. Med. Woch., Nr. 17, 1883; Nr. 24, 1885. Schwartz, Sitzungsber. d. Dorpater Naturf. Ges., 1879, Soyka, Ber. d. Bayr. Akad. d. Wissensch., 1879. Steinmeyer, Ueber Desinfectionslehre, 1884. Sternberg, Amer. Journ. Med. Soc., 1883; Report of Com. on Disin- fectants, 1888. Thol, Ueber d. Einfluss nicht aromat. organ, Séuren. auf Faulniss u. Gaibrung: Diss. Greifswald, 1885. Toussaint, Bull. de l’Acad., 1880. Tyndall, Phil. Trans. of the Roy. Soc., 1877. Vallin, Ann. d’Hyg., 1877; Traité des Désinfectants et de la Désinfection, 1883; Les Nouvelles Etuves & Désinfection: Revue d’Hygiéne, 1883; Ann, d’Hygiene, 1884. Wernicke, Virchow’s Archiv, Bd. 78, 1879; Diss. Dorpat., 1879. Grundriss der Desin- fectionslehre, 1880. Wolff, Centralbl. f. d. Med. Wiss., Nr. 11, 1885. Wolff- hiigel, Mittheilg. a. d. Kais. Ges. Amt., Bd. I., 8. 188, 1881. Wolffhiigel and Knorre, Mitth. a. d. Kaiserl. Ges. Amt, Bd. 1., 8. 352, 1881. CHAPTER IV. CHEMICAL PRODUCTS OF BACTERIA. Backlisch, Ber. d. Deutsch. Chem. Gesellsch., Bd. 18, 1880. 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CHAPTERS VII. VIIL, IX. X. VII.—THE BACTERIOLOGICAL MICROSCOPE. VIII.—MICROSCOPICAL EXAMINATION OF BACTERIA, IX.—PREPARATION OF NUTRIENT MEDIA AND METHODS OF CULTIVATION. X.—-EXPERIMENTS UPON THE LIVING ANIMAL. Almquist, Hygeia, XLV.; Stockholm, 1883. Banti, Manuale di Tecnica Batteriologica, 1885. Baumgarten, Zeitschr. f, Wissensch. Mikr., 1884. Behrens, Hilfsbuch zur Ausfiihrung Mikroskop. Untersuch,, 1883. Bizzozero and Firket, Manuel de Microscopie Clinique, 1885. Blanchard, Rev. Inter. Sci., ILL, 1879. Bordoni Uffreduzzi, Microparasitici, 1885. Brefeld, Bot. Untersuch. iiber Schimmelpilze, Bd. IV., 1881; Botan. Unters. iiber Hefenpilze, Bd. V., 1883; Verhandl. d. Physik. Med. Ges. in Wiirzburg, 1875. Biichner, In Nigeli’s BIBLIOGRAPHY. 645 Untersuch. tiber Niedere Pilze: Munich, 1882; Aerztl. Intelligenzbl., No. 33, 1884. Carpenter, The Microscope and its Revelations (6th Edition), 1881. Cohn, Beitriige zur Biologie der Pflanzen, Bd. I., Heft 3, 1875, 1876. Cornil and Babés, Les Bactéries, 1886. Crookshank, Manuel Pratique de Bactério- logie, traduit par Bergeaud; avec 4 Photomicrographies, 1886. Dolley, Tech- nology of Bacteria Investigation, 1885. Duclaux, Ferments et Maladies, 1881. Ehrlich, Deut. Med. Woch., No. 19, 1882 ; Zeitschr. f. Klin. Med.; Bd. I. 1880. Bd. Il., Heft 3, 1881. Eisenberg, Bakteriologische Diagnostik, 1886. Esmarch, Zeitschrift f, Hygiene, 1886. Fehleisen, Ueber Neue Method. der Untersuch. u. Cultur Pathogen. Bakterien ; Physik. Med. Ges. zu Wiirzburg, 1882, Fligge, Handbuch der Hygiene und der Gewerbe Krankheiten, 1883. Friedlander, Microscopische Technik (Ist Edition), 1884, Gibbes, Practical Histology and Pathology, 1885. Gram, Fortsch. d. Med., IL, No. 6, 1884. Hauser, Ueber Faulnissbacterien; mit 15 Tafeln in Lichtdruck, 1885. Hazlewood, American Monthly Microscop. Journ., 1883. Hiiber and Breker, Die Path. Histolog. und Bacteriologischen Untersuch. Methoden, 1886. Hueppe, Bakteriologische Apparate : Deut. Med. Woch., 1886; Die Methoden der Bakterien Forschung, 1886; translated by Biggs, 1886. Johne, Ueber die Kochschen Reinculturen, 1885. Klebs, Archiv f. Exp. Pathoi., Bd. 1, 1873. Klein, Micro-organisms and Disease, 1886. Koch, Biol. Klin. Woch., No. 15, 1882; Mitth. a. d. Kais. Ges. Amt, Bd. IL, 1881.; Bd. II, 1884; Untersuchungen iiber Wundinfections Krankheiten, 1878; Beitriige z. Biol. d. Pflanzen, Bd. II., Heft 3, 1877. Lee, The Microtomist’s Vade Mecum,1885. Magnin and Sternberg, Bacteria, 1884. Malley, Photomicrography, 1885. Orth, Path. Anat. Diagnostik, 1884. Pasteur, Etudes sur la Biére, 1867. Perty, Zur Kenntniss Kleinster Lebensform, 1852. Plaut, Farbungs Methode z. Nachweis. der Micro-organismen, 1885 ; Salomonsen, Bot. Zeit., No. 39, 1879; No. 28, 1880. Schafer, Course of Practical Histology, 1877. Woodhead and Hare, Pathological Mycology, 1885. CHAPTER XI. EXAMINATION OF AIR, SOIL AND WATER. Angus Smith, Rep. to the Loc, Gov. Board, 1884; Sanitary Record, 1883. Becker, Reichsmedicinalkalender, 1885. Beumer, Deut. Med. Woch., 1886. Bischof, Journ. Soc. Chem. Industry, 1886, Biichner, Vortrige im Aeratl. Verein zu Miinchen, 1881. Chamberland, Compt. Rend., T. 99, p. 247, 1886. Cramer, Die Wasserversorgung von Ziirich, 1885. Crookshank, Notes from a Bact. Labor., Lancet, 1885. Cunningham, Micr. Exam. of the Air: Calcutta, 1874, Fodor, Hygienische Unters. tiber Luft, Boden u. Wasser., 1882. C. Frankel, Zeitschr. f. Hygiene, 1886. Frankland, P. and G., Proc. Roy. Soc.; 1885, 1886; Microorganisms in Water, 1894, Gunning, Arch. f. Hyg., 3, 1883. Hereus, Zeitschr. f. Hygiene, 1886. Hesse, Deut. Med. Woch., Nr. 51, 1884 ; 2, 1884; Mitth. a. d. Ges. Amt, Bd. IL., 1884; Ueber Wasserfiltration : Deut. Med. Woch., 1885; Zeitschr. f. Hygiene, 1886. Klebs and Tommasi-Crudeli, Archiv f. Exper. Path., Bd. 11, 1879. Koch, Mitth. a. d. Ges. Amt, Bad. L., 1881. Laurent, Journal de Pharmacie et de Chimie, 1885. Lemaire, Compt. Rend., T. 57, 1863. Letzerich, Exp. Unters. iib. die Aetiologie des Typhus mit bes. Beriicksichtigung der Trink. u. Gebrauchswasser, 1883, Maddox, Month. Microscop. Journal, 1870. Meade Bolton, Zeitschr. f. Hygiene, 1886, Miflet, Cohn’s Beitr. z. Biol. d. Pflanzen, Bd, III., 1879. Miquel, Annuaire * 646 APPENDICES. de l’Observat. de Montsouris, 1877, 1882; Compt. Rend., T. 86, 1878; Bull. de la Soc. Chim., 1878; Ann. d’Hygiene, 1879; Les Organismes Vivants de lAtmosphére, 1883. Miquel and Freudenreich, La Semaine Médicale, 1884, Moreau and Plantymausion, La Semaine Médicale, 1884. Nageli, Unters. iiber Niedere Pilze., 1882. Olivier, Les Germes de l’Air, Thése, Rev. Scientif., 1883. Pasteur, Ann. de Chim. et de Phys., T. 64,1862; Compt. Rend., T. 50, 1860; T. 52, 1861; T. 56, 1863; T. 85, 1877. Pfeiffer, Zeitschr. f. Hygiene, 1886. Pouchet, Compt. Rend., T. 47, 1858. Schrakamp, Archiv f. Hygiene, Bd. IL, 1884. Sehlen, Fortschr. d. Med., Bd. II., 8. 585, 1885. Smart, Germs, Dust and Disease, 1883, Soyka, Sitz.-Ber. der. K. Bayr. Akad. d. Wiss, : Math, Physik. Classe, 1881; Vortriige im Aerztl., Verein in Miinchen, 1881; D. Vierteljsch. f. Oeff. Ges., Bd. 14, 1882; Prager Med. Woch., 1885; Fortschr, d. Med., 1885. Tissandier, Compt. Rend., T. 78, 1874. Torelli, La Malaria in Italia, 1883, Tyndall, Brit. Med. Journ., 1877; Essays on the Floating Matter of the Air, 1881; Med. Tim. and Gaz., 1870. Wernich, Cohn’s Beitrige z. Biol. d. Pflanzen, Bd. III., 8. 105, 1879. Wolffhtigel and Riedel, Arbeit. a. d, K. Ges. Amt, 1886. Wollny, Viert. f£. Oeff. Ges., S. 705, 1883. Zander, Centralbl. f. Allg. Ges., 1883. CHAPTER XII. PHOTOGRAPHY OF BACTERIA. Crookshank, Photography of Bacteria, 1887. Frankel and Pfeiffer, Mikro- photog. Atlas, 1889. Giinther, Photogram. Path. Mikroorg., 1887. Itzerott and Niemann, Atlas der Microphotograph, 1895. Koch, Cohn’s Beitraige zur Biol. der Pflanz., 1877 ; Mitth. a. d. K. Gesundheitsamte, Bd. 1, 1881. Neuhaus, Centralbl. f. Bakteriolog., Bd. IV. Sternberg, Photomicrographs and How to Make them, 1884. Woodward, Rep. to Surg. Gen. U. 8. Army, 1870. CHAPTER XIII. SUPPURATION. PYMIA. SEPTICHMIA. ERYSIPELAS. GONORRHGA. OPHTHALMIA. Ainstie, Lancet, 1870. Arloing, Recherches sur les Septicémies, 1884. Babés, Compt. Rend., 1883. Balfour, Edinb. Med. Journ., 1877. Barthold, Pyzmisch-Metast, Dissert. Berlin, 1875, Bastian, Brit. Med. Journ., 1878. Béchamp, Compt. Rend., 1881;. Trans. Internat. Med. Cong. London, 1881. Beck, Rep. Loc. Govt. Board, 1880. Birch-Hirschfeld, Untersuchungen iiber Pyaimie, 1873. Braidwood and Vacher, Brit. Med. Journ., 1882. Burdon- Sanderson, Trans. Path. Soc., 1872; Brit. Med. Journ., 1875. Crookshank, Trans. Internat. Congr. of Hygiene, 1892. Dowdeswell, Quart. Journ. Micr. Sc. London, Vol. 18, 1878; Proc. Roy. Soc. London, Vol. 34, 1883. Dreschfeld, Brit. Med. Journ., 1883. Drysdale, Pyrexia, 1880, Garré, Fortschritte d. Med., 165, 1885. Heiberg, Die Puerperalen u. Pyimischen Processe, 1873. Hoffa, Fortsch. d. Med., 1885. Horsley, Rep. Med. Officer Loc. Govt. Board, 1881. Klemperer, Zeitschr. f, Klin. Med., 1885. Koch, Wundinfectionskrank- heiten: Leipzig, 1878; Mittheil. d. Kais. Ges. Amts, Bd. I., 1881. Lister, Lancet, 1867; Med. Times and Gazette, 1877; Quart. Journ. Microscop. Science, » BIBLIOGRAPHY. 647 1887. Oertel, Zur Aetiologie der Infectionskrankheiten, 1881, Ogston, Brit, Med. Journ., Vol. I., 1881; Journ. of Anat. and Phys., Vol. 17, 1882. Passet, Ueber Mikroorganismen der Eitrigen Zellgewebsentziindung des Menschen ; Fortschritte d. Med., Nr. 2, 1885, Bd. 3, 1885. Perret, De la Septicémie : Paris, 1880. Rindfleisch, Lehrb. der Pathol. Gewebelehre: 1 Aufl. S. 204, 1866. Rosenbach, Mikrooganismen bei den Wundinfectionskrankheiten des Menschen: Wiesbaden, 1884. Sternberg, Amer. Journ. Med. Sc.; Johns Hopkins Univ. Stud. Biol. Lab., 1882. Steven, Glasgow Med. Journal, 1884. Sutton, Trans. Path. Soc., 1883. Tiegel, Ueber d. Fiebererregenden Higen- schaften des Microsporon Septicum: Bern. Diss., 1871; Virchow’s Archiv, Bd. 60, 1874. Waldeyer, Virchow’s Arch., Bd. 40, 1867 ; Vortrag. i. d. Med. Ges. zu Breslau, 1871. Watson-Cheyne, Trans. Path. Soc., xxxv., 1884. OSTEOMYELITIS, Becker, Deut. Med. Woch., and Berl. Klin. Woch., 1883. Collmann, Bak- terien im Organismus eines an einer Verletzung am Oberschenkel verstorbenen Miadchens: Gottingen, 1873. Colzi, Lo Sperimentale, 1890. Courmont and Jaboulay, Compt. Rend. Soc. de Biolog., 1890. Eberth, Virchow’s Arch., Bd. 65, 1875. Fehleisen, Phys. Med. Ges. Wiirzburg, 1882. Friedmann, Berl. Klin. Woch., 1876. Garré, Fortschr. d. Med., 1885. Giordano, Prog. I. Mic. Pyog. infett. u. Eziolog. d. Osteom, Impett. Acuta, 1888, Krause, Fortschr. d, Med., Bd. 2, 1884. Lannelongue and Achard, La Semaine Med., 1890; and Compt, Rend. Soc. de Biolog., 1890. Peyroud, Compt. Rend., 1884. Rodet, Compt. Rendus, T. 99, 1884. Rosenbach, Centralbl. f, Chirurgie, 1884. Schiiller, Centralbl. f. Chirurgie, Nr. 12, 1876. ENDOCARDITIS. Birch-Hirschfeld and Gerber, Archiv d., Heilkunde, 1876. Bramwell, Diseases of the Heart, 1884. Bristowe, Brit. Med. Journ., 1884, Coupland, Brit. Med. Journ., 1885. Gibbes, Brit. Med. Journ., 1884. Goodhart, Trans. Path. Soc., vol. xxxi., 1880, Hamburg, Berlin: Inaug.-Diss., 1880. Klebs, Archiv f. Exper. Pathol., Bd. 9, 1878. Koch, Mittheil. a. d, Kais, Ges. Amt, Bd. I., 1881. Koester, Virchow’s Arch., Bd. 72, 1875. Kundrat, Sitz.-Ber. d. Kais. Acad. d. Wissensch. zu Wien, 1883. Leyden, Zeitschr. f. Klin. Med., 1881. Nocard, Recueil de Méd. Vét., 1885. Oberbeck, Casuistische Beitrige zur Lehre von der Endocarditis Ulcerosa : Inaug.-Diss., 1881. Orth, J., Ver- sammlung Deutscher Naturf. zu Strasburg, 1885. Osler, Brit. Med. Journ., 1885 ; Trans. Int. Med. Congress, 1881. Ribbert, Fortsch. d. Med., 1886. Rosenbach, Archiv fiir Exper. Pathol., Bd. 9, 1878. Wedel, Berl. Klin. Wochenschr., 1877. Weichselbaum, Wien. Med. Woch., 1885. Weigert, Virchow’s Arch., Bd. 84, 1881. Wilks, Brit. Med. Journ., 1882. Wyssokowitech, Centralbl f. d. Med. Wissensch., Nr. 33, 1885. ERYSIPELAS. Baader, Schweiz. Naturf. Gesellsch., 1875. Denuce, Etude sur la Pathogénie et VAnatomie Pathologique de VErysipéle, 1885. Dupeyrat, Recherches Cliniques et Expérimentales sur la Pathogénie de YErysipele, 1881. Fehleisen, Wiirzburger Phys. Med. Ges., 1881; Deut. Zeitschr. f. Chir., Bd. 16, 1882; Die Aetiologie des Erysipels. : Berlin, 1883. Hiiter, Med. Centralbl., Ny. 34, 1868. 648 -APPENDICES. Janicke and Neisser, Centralbl. f. Chir., Nr. 25, 1884. Klebs, Archiv f. Exper: Pathol. u. Pharmacol., Bd. 4, 1875, Lukomsky, Virchow’s Archiv, Bd. 60, 1874. Nepven, Des Bactéries dans l’Erysipéle, 1885. Orth, Archiv f. Exper. Pathol. u. Pharmacol., Bd. I., 1873. Raynaud, Union Méd., 1873, Recklinghausen and Lankowski, Virchow’s Arch., Bd. 60, 1874. Rheiner, Virchow’s Arch., Bd. 100, Heft 2, 1884. Tillmanns, Verhandl. d. Deutsch. Ges. f. Chirurgie, 1878; Archiv f, Klin. Chirurgie, Bd. 23, 1879. Trogsier, Bull. Soc. Anat. de Paris, 1875. Wolff, Virchow’s Arch., Bd. 81, 1880. PUERPERAL FEVER. Aufrecht, Naturforsch. Versamml., 1881. Doléris, La Fiévre Puerpérale et: les Organismes Infect., 1886. Heiberg, Die Puerperalen und Pydmischen Processe, 1873. Karewski, Zeitschr. f. Geburtsh. u. Gynadkologie, Bd. 7, 1881. Laffter, Bresl. Aerztl. Ztg., 1879. Mayrhofer, Monatsschr. f. Geburtsk. u. Frauenkrankheiten, Bd. 25, 1865. Orth, Virchow’s Arch., Bd. 58, 1873. Pasteur, Bull. de Acad. de Méd., T. 9, 1880. Recklinghausen and Lankowski,. Virchow’s Arch., Bd. 60, 1873. Waldeyer, Arch. f. Gynakologie, iii., 1872. GONORRHGA. Arning, Viertelj. f. Dermatol. u. Syph., 8. 371, 1883. Aufrecht, Patho- Jogische Mittheilungen,-1881; Centralbl. f. d. Med. Wiss., Nr. 16, 1883, Bockhart, Sitzungsbericht d. Phys. Med. Ges. zu Wiirzburg, 1882; Viertelj. f. Dermatol. und Syph., 1888. Bokai, Allgem. Med. Centralzeitung, Nr. 74, 1880. 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Michel, Graefe’s Archiv f, Augenheilkunde, 1882. Neisser, Fortschr. d. Med., Bd. 2, 8. 73, 1884. Reuss, Wien. Med. Presse, 1884. Roth, Virchow’s Archiv, Bd. 55, 1872. Salomonsen, Fortschr. d. Med., Bd. 2, 8. 78, 1884. Sattler, Ber. iib. d. Ophthalmologen Congress zu Heidelberg, 1882; Zehender’s Klin. Monatsblatt, and Wien. Med. Woch., Nr. 17, 1883. Sattler and de Wecker, L’Ophthalmie Jéquiritique, 1883. Schleich, Verh. des Ophthalmologen Congr. zu Heidelberg, 1883. Vennemann and Bruylants, Le Jéquirity et son Principe Pathogéne, 1884. Vossius, Berl. Klin. Wochenschr., Nr. 17, 1884. Widmark, Hygeia: Stockholm, 1885. Zehender, Bowman Lecture: Lancet, 1886. CHAPTER XIV. ANTHRAX. Archangelski, Centralbl. f. d. Med. Wiss., 1882, 1883. Bert, Compt. Rend. Soc. de Biol., T. 4, 1877; T. 5, 1878; T. 6, 1879. Bleuler, Correspondenzbl. a. Schweiz Aerzte, 1884. Bollinger, Arbeit. a. d. Patholog. Inst. zu Mitinchen, 1886; Centralbl. f d. Med. Wiss., Bd. 10, 1872; Sitzungsber. d. Ges. f. Morphol. 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Rend., T. 85, 1877, 1878, 1880; Recherches Expérimentales sur la Maladie Charbonneuse, 1879. Wachenheim, Etude Expérimentelle sur la Septicité et la Virulence du Sang ‘Charbonneux, 1880. CHAPTER XV. QUARTER-EVIL. MALIGNANT CEDEMA. RAG-PICKER’S SEPTIC/MIA OF GUINEA-PIGS. SEPTICEMIA OF MICE. QUARTER-EVIL, _ Arloing, Cornevin and Thomas, Compt. Rend., 1880; Bull. de lAcad. de Méd., and Revue de Méd., 1881; Du Charbon Bactérien, Charbon Symptoma- tique, etc., 1883; Revue de Méd., 1884; Chabert’s Disease : Transl. by Dawson Williams in Micro-parasites and Disease (New Syd. Soc.), 1886. Babés, Journ. de ’Anatomie, 1884. Bollinger and_Feser, Wochenschr. f. Thierheil- kunde, 1878. Ehlers, Unters. tib. d. Rauschbrandpilz: Inaug. Diss. Rostock, 1884. Hess, Bericht iiber die entschddigten Rauschbrand u. Milzbrandfalle im Canton Bern, 1886. Kitt, Jahresber. der K. Thierarzneisch. in Miinchen, 1884. Neelsen and Ehlers, Ber. d. Naturforsch. Ges. zu Rostock, 1884. Strebel, Schweiz. Archiv f. Thierheilk., 1886. MALIGNANT CEDEMA. Brieger and Ehrlich, Berl. Klin. Wochenschr., N. 44, 1882. Chauveau and Arloing, Archiv Vét., 1884; Bull. Acad. de Méd., 1884. Davaine, Bull. de YAcad. de Méd., 1862. Gaffky, Mitth. as. d. K. Ges. Amt., 1881. Hesse, W. and B., Deut. Med. Woch., 1885. Kitasato and Weyl, Zeitschr. f. Hygiene, Bd. VIII. Kitt, Jahresber. der K. Thierarzneischule in Miinchen, 1884. Koch, Mitth. aus dem Ges. Amt, L., S. 54, 1881. Lebedeff, Arch. de Phys. Norm. et Path., 1882. Lustig, Jahresber. d. K. Thierarzneischule zu Hannover, 1884. Pasteur, Bull. de Acad. de Méd., 1877, 1881. Roger, Compt. Rend. Soc. de Biol., 1889. Roux and Chamberland, Ann. de l'Institut Pasteur, 1887. Trifaud, Rev. de Chirurg, T. iii, Van Cott, Centralb. f. Bact., 1891. Verneuil, La Semaine Méd., 1890. RAG-PICKER’S SEPTICH/MIA. SEPTICH@MIA OF GUINEA-PIGS. SEPTICH MIA OF MICE. Bordoni-Uffreduzzi, Zeitsch. f. Hygiene, 1888. Klein, Centralbl. f. Bac- teriolog., 1890. Koch, Wundinfectionskrankeit, Trans, New Syd. Soc., 1880. Paltauf, Wiener Klin. Woch., 1888, BIBLIOGRAPHY. 651 CHAPTER XVI. HEMORRHAGIC SEPTICEMIA. SEPTICEMIA OF BUFFALOES. SEPTIC PLEURO-PNEUMONIA OF CALVES. SwINE FreveR. SEPTICHMIA OF DEER. SEPTICM@MIA OF RABBITS. Fow.L CHoLerRa. FowL ENTERITIS. DUCK CHOLERA. GROUSE DISEASE. Babés, Compt. Rend. de l’Acad. d. 8c., 1883; Arch. de Physiol., 1884. Barthélémy, Compt. Rend., T. 96, No. 18, 1883, Bunzl-Federn, Centralbl. f. Bacteriolog., 1891. Camera, Centralbl. f. Bacteriolog., 1891. Cornil, Arch. de Physiol., Bd. 10, 1882. Cornil and Chantemesse, Le Bulletin Méd., 1887. Cornil and Toupet, Bull. de la Soc. Nat. d’Acclimation., 1888. Davaine, Bull, de ?Acad. de Méd., 1879. Eberth and Schimmelbusch, Virchow’s Archiv, 1889 ; Fortschr. d. Med., Bd. VI. Gaffky, Mitt. aus dem K. G. Amte, 1881. Gamaleia, Centralb. f. Bacteriolog., 1888. Hueppe, Berl. Klin. Woch., 1886. Ioannés and Mégnin, Journ. d’Acclimatation, 1877. Kitt, Allg. Deut. Gefliigelzeitung, 1885. Klein, Rep. Med. Off. Local Govt. Board, 1877-78; Fortschr. der Med., 1888; Centralb. f. Bakteriolog., 1889. Koch, Aetiologie der Wundinfections R., 1878. Oreste and Armani, Atti de R. Instit, d’Incorrag. Alle Sci. Nat., Econ e Tech., 1887. Pasteur, Compt. Rend., T. 90, 1886. Perroncito, Arch. f, Wiss. u. Prakt. Thierheilk., 1879, Petri, Centralbl. f. d. Med. Wiss., 1885. Rietsch and Jobert, Compt. Rend., 1888. Salmon, Reports Bureau of Animal Industry, 1886, 1887, 1888. Salmon and Smith, Amer. Monthly Med. Journ., 1881. Schiitz, Archiv f. Wiss. und Prakt. Thierheilk., 1888. Semmer, Deut. Zeitschr. f. Theirmed. u. Vergl. Path., 1878. Smith, Journ. f. Comp. Med. and Surg., 1887; Zeitschr. f. Hygiene, 1891. Smith and Veranus Moore, Rep. Bureau of Animal Industry, 1895. Ziirn, Die Krankheiten des Hausgefliigels, 1882. CHAPTER XVII. PNEUMONIA. INFECTIOUS PLEURO-PNEUMONIA OF CATTLE. INFLUENZA. PNEUMONIA. Afanassiew, Compt. Rend. Soc. de Biol. Paris, T. 5,1884. De Blasi, Rivista Internaz. di. Med. e Chir., 1885.: Bruvlant and Verriers, Bull. de l’Acad. Belge, 1880. Dreschfeld, Fortschr. d. Med., Bd. 3, 389, 1885. Foa and Bordoni-Uffreduzzi, Deut. Med. Woch., 1886. Frinkel, Verhandl. d. Congr. f. Innere Med., Fortschr. d. Med, Nov., 1884; Deut. Med. Woch., 1886; Zeitschr. f. Klin. Med., Bd. x. and xi, 1886. Friedlander, Virchow’s Arcb., Bd. 87, 1882; Fortschr. d. Med., Bd. L, 1883; Bd. IL, 1884; Bd. 3, 92, 1885. Friedlander and Frobenius, Berl. Klin. Woch., 1883. Germain-Sée, Compt. Rend. Acad. de Sc. Paris, 1884; Des Maladies Spécifiques du Poumon, 1885. Giles, Brit. Med. J., Vol. IL, 1883. Griffini and Cambria, Centralbl. f. d. Med. Wiss., 1883. Jaccoud, La France Médicale, 1886. : Jiirgensen, Berl. Klin. Woch., Bd. 22, 1884. Klein, Centralbl. f. d. Med. Wissensch., 1884. Koranyi and Babés, Pester Med. Chir. Presse, 1884. Kiihn, Deutsch. Arch. f. Klin. Med., 1878; Berl. Klin. Woch., Nr. 38, 1881, Lancereaux and Besancon, 652 APPENDICES. Archiv Gén. de Méd., 1886. Maguire, Brit. Med. Journ., Vol. IL, 1884. Manfredi, Fortsch. d. Med., 1886. Matray, Wien. Med. Presse, Nr. 23, 1883. Mendelssohn, Zeitschr. f. Klin. Med, Bd. 7, 1884. Nauwerck, Beitr. zur Pathol. Anat. von Ziegler, 1884. Neumann, Berl. Klin. Woch., 1885. Paw- lowsky, Berl. Klin. Woch., 1885. Peterlein, Bericht ii. d. Vet.-Wesen. i. K. Sachsen, 1885. Pipping, Fortsch. d. Med., Nos. 10 and 14, 1886. Platanow, Mitth. a. d. Wiirzburg. Med. Klinik, 1885; Ueber die Diagnostische Bedeutung d. Pneumoniekokken: Inaug.-Diss. Wiirzburg, 1884, Ribbert, Deut. Med. Woch., Nr. 9, 1885. Salvioli and Zaslein, Centralbl. f. d. Med. Wissensch., 1883. Arch. pour les Sc. Méd., T. 8., 1884. Schou, Fortschr. der Med., Bd. 3, Nr. 15, 1886. Sternberg, Amer. Journ. Med. Sciences, 1885; Journ. Roy. Micr. Soc., 1886. Talamon, Progr. Médic., 1883. Thost, Deut. Med. Woch.,, 1886. Weichselbaum, Wien. Med. Woch., 1886. Ziehl, Centralbl. f. d. Med. Wiss., 1883; Centralbl. f. d. Med. Wiss., 1884. CEREBRO-SPINAL MENINGITIS. Bonome, Centralbl. f. Bact. u. Parasitolog., 1V. Foa, Zeitschr. f. Hygiene, IV. Leichtenstern, Deut. Med. Woch., Nr. 23 u. 31, 1885. Leyden, Centralbl. f, Klin. Med., Nr. 10, 1883. Weichselbaum, Wien. Klin. Woch., 1888. PLEURO-PNEUMONIA. Arloing, Compt. Rend. cix., 1889. Bruce and Loir, Ann. de l'Institut Pasteur, 1891. Bruylants and Verriers, Bull. de l’Acad. Belg., 1880. Cornil and Babés, Arch. de Physiol. Norm. et Path., T. 2, 1883. Lustig, Centralb. f. die Med. Wiss., 1885. Mayrwieser, Woch. f. Thierheilk, u. Viehzucht, 19, 1884. Pasteur, Recueil de Méd. Vét., 1882. Poels, Fortsch. d. Med., 1886. Poels and Nolen, Centralbl. f. d. Med. Wiss., Nr. 9, 1884; Fortsch. d. Med., 1886. Putz, Thier, Med, Vortrige, Bd. 1, 1889. Report on Pleuro-pneumonia and Tuberculosis, 1888. Schiitz and Steffen, Archiv f. Wiss. und Prakt. Thierheilk., Bd. xv. Sussdorff, Deutsche Zeitschr. f. Thiermed. u. Vergl. Pathol., 1879. INFLUENZA. Babés, Centralbl. f. Bacteriolog., 1890; Deutsche Med. Woch., 1892. .Bein, Zeitschr. f. Hygiene, 1890. Bouchard, La Semaine Méd., 1890, Canon, Deutsche Med. Woch., 1892. Fischel, Prager Med. Woch., 1890; Zeitschr. f. Heilkunde, 1891. Jolles, Wiener Med. Blatt., 1890. Kirchner, Centralbl. f£. Bacteriolog., 1890; Zeitschr. f. Hygiene, 1890. Kitasato, Deutsche Med. Woch., 1892. Klein, Brit. Med. Journ., 1892. Klebs, Centralbl. f. Bakteriolog., 1890 ; Deutsche Med. Woch., 1890. Pfeiffer, Deutsche Med. Woch., 1892. Prudden, New York Med. Rec., 1890. CHAPTER XVIII. ORIENTAL PLAGUE. RELAPSING FEVER. ‘TYPHUS FEVER. ° YELLOW FEVER. ORIENTAL PLAGUE. Aoyama, Mitth. ii. d. Pest. Epidemie im Jahre 1894; in Hong Kong, 1895. Yersin, Ann, de l'Institut Pasteur, 1894. Yersin, Calmette and Borrel, Ann. de l'Institut Pasteur, 1895.°. © BIBLIOGRAPHY. 653 RELAPSING FEVER. Albrecht, St. Petersb. Med. Woch., 1879. Carter, Lancet, 1879; Trans. Internat. Med. Congress, 1881. Cohn, Deut. Med. Woch., 1879. Engel, Berl. Klin, Woch., 1873. Giinther, Fortschr. d. Med., 1885. Guttmann, Virchow’s Arch., 1880, Heydenreich, St. Petersb. Med. Woch., 1876 ; Der Parasit des Riick- falltyphus, 1877. Jaksch, Wien. Med. Woch., Juli, 1880. Koch, Deut. Med. Woch., 1879. Laptschinsky, Centralbl. f. d. Med. Wiss., Bd. 13, 1875. Manas- sem, St. Petersb. Med. Woch., No. 18, 1876. Metchnikoff, Virchow’s Archiv, 1877. Moczutowsky, Deutsches Archiv fiir Klin. Med., Bd. xxiv., 1876. Miihlhaduser, Virchow’s Arch., Bd. 97, 1880. Obermeier, Med. Centralbl., 11; Berl. Med. Ges.; Berl. Klin. Wochenschr., 1873. Soudakewitch, Ann. de l'Institut Pasteur, 1891. Weigert, Deut. Med. Woch., 1876. YELLOW FEVER. Babés, Compt. Rend., 17 Sept., 1883. Bouley, Compt. Rend., T. 100, p. 1276, 1885. Carmona y Valle, Lecons sur l’Etiol. et la Prophylax. de la Fiévre Jaune, 1885. Cerecedo, El Siglo Medico, 1886. Domingos Freire, Recherches sur la Cause de la Fiévre Jaune, 1884; La Fiévre Jaune et ses Inoculations Préventives, 1896. Domingos Freire and Rebourgeon, Compt. Rend., T. 99, p. 804, 1884. . CHAPTER XIX. SCARLET FEVER AND MEASLES. SCARLET FVER. Coze and Feltz, Les Maladies Infectieuses, 1872. Crooke, Lancet, 1883 ; Fortsch. d. Med., 1885. Crookshank, Report Agric. Dept., 1887. Hahn, Berl. Klin. Woch., No. 38, 1882. Heubner and Bahrdt, Berl. Klin. Woch., Nr. 44, 1884. Klein, Nature, xxxiv., 1886; Report of the Medical Officer of the Privy Council, 1887, 1888, 1889. Laure, Lyon Médical, 1886. McKendrick, Brit. Med, Journal, 1872. Pohl-Pincus, Centralbl. f. d. Med. Wiss., No. 36, 1883. Roth, Miinch. Aerztl. Intelligenzbl., 1883. MEASLES. Cornil and Babés, Archiv de Phys., 1883. Keating, Phil. Med. Times, 1882. CHAPTER XX. SMALL-POX. CATTLE PLAGUE. SMALL-POX. Chauveau, Compt. Rend., 1868. Cohn, Virchow’s Archiv, Bd. 55, 1872. Copeman, Brit. Med. Journ., 1896; The Practitioner, 1896. Cornil and Babés, Soc, Méd. des Hép., 1883. Crookshank, History and Path. of Vaccination, 1889. Haccius, Variola-vaccine, 1892. Hamerink, Ueber die sog. Vac. u. Variola, 188+. Ischamer, Aerztl. Verein. Steiermark, 1880. Klebs, Arch. f. Exp. Path. u. Pharmakol., Bd. 10, 1874. Klein, Rep. Med, Off. Loc. Govt, Board, 1893-4. 654 APPENDICES. Luginbuhl, Verhdl. d, Phys. Med. Ges. in Wiirzburg, 1873, Marchand, Revue Mycologique, 1882. Pfeiffer, Die Protozoen als Krankheitserreger, 1890; Behandl. und Prophylax. der Blittern, 1893. Pissin, Berl. Klin. Woch., 1874. Plaut, Das Organis. Contagium der Schafpocken, 1883. Pohl-Pincus, Vaccina- tion, 1882. Quist, St. Petersburg Med. Woch., Nr. 46, 1883. Reports, Royal Vaccination Commission, 1888-96. Ruffer and Plimmer, Brit. Med. Journ., 1894. Weigert, Ueber Bakterien in der Pockenhaut, 1871; Anat. Beitr. z Lehre v. d. Pocken, 1874. Wolf, Berl. Klin. Woch., Nr. 4, 1883. Ziilzer, Berl. Klin. Woch., 1872. CATTLE PLAGUE. Crookshank, History and Pathology of Vaccination, 1889. Report of the Cattle Plague Commission, 1865. Report on Indian Cattle Plague, 1871. Semmer and Archangelski, Ueber das Rinderpestcontagium und dessen Miti- gation ; Centralbl. f. d. Med. Wiss., 1883. Simpson, Brit. Med. Journal, 1896. Smart, Reports on Cattle Plague, Edinburgh, 1865. CHAPTER XXI. SHEEP-POX. FOOT AND MOUTH DISEASE. SHEEP-POX,. Crookshank, History and Path. of Vaccination, 1889. Foor anp Moura DISEASE, Klein, Report Med. Off. Local Govt. Board, 1885. Schottelius, Centralb. f. Bakteriolog., 1892. CHAPTER XXII. HORSE-POX. COW-POX. HORSE-POXx. Crookshank, History and Pathology of Vaccination, 1889. Cow-Pox. Bucknill, Prov. Med. Journ., 1895. Crookshank, Brit. Med. Journ., 1888; History and Pathology of Vaccination, 1889 (Vol. II. contains reprints of the works of Jenner, Pearson, Woodville, Loy, Rogers, Birch, Bousquet, Estlin, Ceely, Badcock, Auzias-Turenne, Dubreuilh, Layet). Reports of the Royal Vaccination Commission. CHAPTER XXIII. DIPHTHERIA. Abbot, Bull. Johns Hopkins Univ., 1891, 1893 ; Journ. of Path. and Bact., 1893. Babés, Virchow’s Archiv. 1890. Behring, Deutsche Med. Woch. 1890. Behring and Kitasato, Deutsche Med. Woch., 1890. Birch-Hirschfeld, Archiv fiir Heilk., 1872. Brieger and Frankel, Berl. Klin. Woch., 1890. BIBLIOGRAPHY. 655 Buhl, Zeitschr. fiir Biol., 1867, Cornil, Arch. de Physiol., 1881. Eberth, Med. Centralbl., XI., Nr. 8, 1873. Emmerich, Compt. Rendus et Mémoires du V. Congrés Internat. d’ Hygiene, 1884 ; Deut. Med. Woch., 1884. Everett, Med. and Surg. Reporter, 1881. Forster, Wien. Med. Woch., 1881. Francotte, La Diphbthérie, 1885. Freidberger, Deut. Zeitschr. fiir Thiermed. u. Vergl. Pathol., 1879. Fiirbringer, Virch. Arch., Bd. 91, 1883. Gerhardt and Klebs, Verhandl. d. Congresses f. Inn. Med., 1882, 1883. Heubner, Die Experimentelle Diph- therie, 1883. Hueter and Tommasi, Centralbl. f. d. Med, Wiss., 1868. Klebs, Arch. f. Exp. Pathol. Bd. 4, 1875. Klein, Report Med. Dept. Local Govt. Board, 1889. Letzerich, Berl. Klin. Woch., xi., 1874; Virch. Arch., Bd. 53, 1872; Bd. 68, 1876. 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Histol. der Diphtherie, 1878. Zarniko, Centralbl. f. Bact., 1889. CHAPTER XXIV. TYPHOID FEVER. Almquist, Typhoidfeberus-Bakterie, 1882. Beumer and Peiper, Zeitschr. f. Hygiene, 1886. Birch-Hirschfeld, Zeitschr. f. Epidemiologie, I., 1874. Boens, Acad. Roy. de Méd. de Belgique: Bull. 3 Sér., T. 17, 1883. Brautlecht, Virchow’s Arch., Bd. 84, 1881. Coats, Brit. Med. Journ., 1882. Crooke, Brit. Med. Journ., 1882. Eberth, Arch. f. Pathol. Anat., Bd. 8), 1880; Volkmann, Klin. Vortriige, 1883. Eppinger, Beitr. zur Pathol. Anatomie aus d. Patholog, Institut. Prag., 1880. Feltz, Compt. Rend., T. 85, 1877. Fischel, Beitr. zur Pathol. Anat. aus d. Pathol.-Anat. Inst. Prag., 1880. Fraenkel and Simmonds, Die Aetiologische Bedeutung des Typhus-Bacillus, 1886. Gaffky, Mitth, a, d. Ges. Amt, Bd. IL, 1884. Klebs, Arch. f. Exper. Pathol. u. Pharmakol., 1880. Klein, Med. Centralbl., xii., 1874, Letzerich, Virchow’s Archiv, Bd. 68, 1876 ; Archiv f. Exper. Pathol., Bd. 9, 1878; Ba. 10, 1881; Experimentelle Unter- suchungen tiber die Aetiologie des Typhus Abdominalis : Leipzig, 1883. Luca- tello, Bollet. d. R. Accad, Med. di Genova, 1886. Maraghano, Centralbl. f. d. Med. Wiss., Bd. 15, 1882. Meisels, Wien. Med. Woch., 1886. Meyer, Unters. jiber den Bacillus des Abdominaltyphus: Inaug. Diss., 1881. Michael, Fortsch. d. Med., 1885. Neuhauss, Berl. Klin. Woch., 1886. Pfeiffer, Deut. Med. Woch., Nr. 29, 1885. Rappin, Contrib. 4 l’Etude des Bact. de la Bouche, 4 Etat Normal et dans la Fievre Typhoide, 1881. Seitz, Bakteriolog. Studien z. Typhusitiologie, 1886. Sirotinin, Zeitsch. f. Hygiene, 1886. Tayon, Compt. Rend., T. 99, p. 331, 1884. Tizzoni, Studi. di Pat. Sperim. sulla Gen. d. Tifo.: Milan, 1880. Wernich, Zeitschy. f. Klin, Med., Bd. 6, 1882. 656 APPENDICES. CHAPTER XXvV. SWINE-TYPHOID. Klein, Rep. of the Med. Offic. of the Privy Council, 1877-78 ; Virchow’s Archiv, 1884. M‘Fadyean, Journ. of Comp. Path. and Therapeutics, 1895. Report of a Conference on Swine-fever: Board of Agriculture, 1896. Rietsch, Jobert and Martinaud, Compt. Rend., T. 106. Selander, Centr. f. Bakt. u. Parasitenk., 1888 ; Ann de l'Institut Pasteur, 1890. Smith and Veranus Moore, Bull. of Bureau of Animal Industry U.S., 1894. Welch and Clement, Trans. Internat. Vet. Congress of Amer., 1893. CHAPTER XXVI. SWINE-MEASLES. DISTEMPER IN DOGS. EPIDEMIC DISEASE OF FERRETS. EPIDEMIC DISEASE OF MICE. SWINE-MBASLES. Cornil and Babés, Arch. de Physiol. 1883. Detmers, Science, 1881. Eggeling, Fortschr. d. Med., 1883. Léffler, Arbeiten aus dem Kaiser]. Gesund- heits Amt, Bd. 1., 1885. Lydtin and Schottelius, Der Rothlauf der Schweine : Wiesbaden, 1885. Pasteur, Compt. Rend., T. 95, 1882. Pasteur and Thuillier, Bull. de Acad. de Méd. de Paris: Compt. Rend., T. 97, 1883. Salmon, Report Depart. Agricul. Washington, 1881, 1884. Schiitz, Ueber den Rothlauf der Schweine und die Impfung desselben, 1885. CHAPTER XXVII, ASIATIC CHOLERA. CHOLERA NOSTRAS. CHOLERAIC DIARRHG&A FROM MEAT-POISONING. DYSENTERY. CHOLERAIC DIARRHGA OF FOWLS. CHOLERA. Ali-Cohen, Fortschr. der Med., 1887, 1888. Almquist, Zeitschr. f. Hygiene, 1887. Babés, Virchow’s Archiv, 1885. Bianchi, Lancet., 1884. Bitter, Archiv f. Hygiene, 1886. Bochefontaine, Expér. pour servir 4 l’Etude des Phénoménes déterminés chez Homme par l’Ingestion Stomacale du Liquide Diarrhéique du Choléra: Compt. Rend., 1884. Brieger, Deutsche Med. Woch., 1887; Berl. Klin. Woch., 1887; Virchow’s Archiv, 1887. Brunetti, Fatti Considerazioni Conclusioni sul Coléra, 1885, Biichner, Archiv f. Hygiene, 1885; Miinchn. Aerztl. Intelligenzbl., 8. 549, 1884. Btichner and Emmerich, Miinch. Med. Woch., 1885. Bujwid, Zeitschr. f. Hygiene, Centralbl. f. Bacteriolog., 1888. Cameron, Brit. Med. Journ., 1884. Cattani, Deut. Med. Woch. 1886. Carter, Lancet, 1884. Cheyne, Brit. Med. Journ., 1885. Crookshank, Lancet, 1885. Cunningham, Scientific Memoirs of Med. Off. of Indian Army, 1885, 1891. Deneke, Deut. Med. 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Pfeiffer, Die Protozoen als Krankheitserreger, 1890. Podwyssozki and Sawtschenko, Centr. f. Bakt. u. Parasitenk., 1892. Ruffer and Walker, Brit. Med. Journ. 1892; Journ. of Comp. Path., Vol. I. Russell, Brit. Med, Journ., 1890.’ Schiitz, Munch. Med, Woch., 1890. Shaltock and Ballance, Proc. Roy. Soc., 1895. Soudakewitch, Ann. de l'Institut Pasteur, 1892. Wiekham, Archiv. de Méd. Exper., 1890, SUPPLEMENTARY APPENDIX. EXTRACTS FROM THE FiNAL REPORT OF THE ROYAL VACCINATION COMMISSION. Tue final Report of the Royal Commission ito inquire into the subject of Vaccination was published on September 18th, 1896.* The author desires to gratefully acknowledge the permission granted him, by the Controller of Her Majesty’s: Stationery Office, to make extracts bearing more especially on the history and pathelogy of protective inoculation and the prevention of small-pox. The reader is recommended by the author to study the whole of the report. History of Smatl-Pox.t The early history of small-pox, like that of many similar diseases, is obscure, is subject to much debate, and, save perhaps on one point, is of antiquarian interest only. The records of the eighteenth century show that the disease was very prevalent in western Europe during the whole of that century. The records of the seventeenth century also show that small-pox was a very common disease during that century : this is especially the case as regards the latter half of the century. The statistics which exist with respect to Geneva, and various scattered statements, further show that small-pox was a well-known disease in the sixteenth century ; but, except for the records which are said to exist of severe epidemics in Iceland taking place as early as 1241, as we go further back the evidence as to the existence of the disease becomes less and less clear, and indeed debate- able, depending as it does largely on the interpretation of incidental *The report may be obtained either directly, or through any bookseller, from Eyre & Spottiswoode, East Harding Street, Fleet Street, E.C., and 32, Abingdon Street, Westminster, S.W.; or John Menzies & Co., 12, Hanover Street, Edinburgh, and 90, West Nile Street, Glasgow; or Hodges, Figgis & Co., Limited, 104, Grafton Street, Dublin. + The heading to the extracts from the Report of the Commission are mine. —E. M. C. 667 668 SUPPLEMENTARY APPENDIX. statements in various medical and other writings. There seems, how- ever, to be adequate proof of the prevalence of small-pox in the East, in Asia Minor and other countries, even in the earlier centuries of the Christian era. A view very generally taken teaches that small-pox, introduced from the East, began to be common in western Europe during the fifteenth century, though perhaps existing still earlier; that, it increased during the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries, especially the latter ; and that it was very prevalent during the eighteenth century. In dealing with the eighteenth century it must be borne in mind that during the second half of the century the natural conduct of small-pox, as we shall see later on, was modified by the practice of inoculation—that is, by the artificial giving of the disease by the introduction of the virus through a wound in the skin. Our knowledge of the history of small-pox in western Europe during the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries is very largely based on the official records known as the ‘London Bills of Mortality.” Official records bearing on small-pox are furnished by Geneva, going back as far as the sixteenth century, by Sweden, going back to the year 1749, and by some other places. Data are also furnished, especially for the latter part of the eighteenth century, by parish records in. various parts of Great Britain reaching over a variable number of years, as well as by scattered statements in various works. These Bills of Mortality form by far the most complete source of our knowledge of small-pox in England in past times ; but it must be borne in mind that in respect to any contagious disease like small-pox the conditions of London were peculiar. The population was to a marked extent a moving one; a large number of persons were continually entering London or leaving it, were passing to and from it, from and to the provinces of England and other countries. Of these persons, some, coming from infected districts, brought into London fresh sources of contagion ; others again, coming from districts free from small-pox, and never having had the disease, brought into London fresh material to serve as food for the disease. Further, London presented in an exaggerated degree the two features of a great city which have a great influence on the progress and characters of a contagious disease like small-pox. The crowding both of the dwelling-places and the thoroughfares, as well as the movement continually going on, multiplied the opportunities for the spread of disease, and the accompanying insanitary conditions, as well as the greater inducement to irregular living, tended to increase the severity of the disease when taken, and to heighten the mortality from it. The history of small-pox in London must not be taken as representative of the history of small-pox in England generally. Inoculation of Small-pox. The practice of inoculation for the small-pox—that is, the artificial introduction of the virus into the system by the insertion of fluid from a variolous pustule into wounds of the skin made for the purpose— began definitely in England towards the end of the first quarter of the REPORT OF THE ROYAL VACCINATION COMMISSION, 669 eighteenth century. Attention was directed to the matter by letters from Timoni of Athens (dated 1713) and Pylarini, published in the 29th volume of the Philosophical Transactions (1716), and especially by a letter from Lady Mary Wortley Montagu in 1717. Though there are indications that in Great Britain and Ireland, as in other countries, some sort of inoculation had occasionally been practised at a much earlier date, the first clearly recorded case in England is that of the daughter of Lady Mary Wortley Montagu (whose son had some time before been inoculated at Constantinople), inoculated by Maitland, in London, in April 1721. Other cases soon followed in England, and about the same time the practice was also introduced in other countries of western Europe, and into the United States of America, namely, at Boston. It was found that the attacks induced by inoculation were as a rule milder, and very much less fatal, than the attacks of the “natural ” disease, the fever and constitutional disturbance being less and of shorter duration, and the eruptive pustules much fewer : the number of these varied, being commonly a dozen or two, som:tines only two or three, sometimes a hundred or more. In som: cases there was no eruption at all, the effect being limited to constitutional disturbances and to changes in the wounds of inoculation themselves ; it was maintained that in such cases the disease had really been taken, and immunity against a subsequent attack secured, as in case: of natural small-pox or of inoculated small-pox manifesting itself in an eruption of pustules. In England the practice of inoculation at its introduction, though much lauded and strongly urged by some, was bitterly opposed by others. Moreover, the initial enthusiasm in favour of it soon declined, so that in the years 1730-40 very little inoculation seems to have been practised. About 1740, however, a revival appears to have taken place: in 1746 an Inoculation and Small-pox Hospital was started in London ; and during the whole of the latter half of the eighteenth century the practice may be said to have been very general. It was especially so during the last quarter of the century, the increase being at least largely due to the ‘improved methods” of inoculation introduced by one Sutton in 1763, and known as “ the Suttonian method.” Since an inoculated person was infectious, each inoculation was a source of danger to those, not protected by a previous attack, who came into the company of, or even near, the inoculated person during the attack; and this danger was increased by the fact that the mild character of the inoculated disease permitted, in many cases at least, the patient to move about among his fellows. Moreover, as Haygarth, himself a zealous advocate of inoculation in a systematic regulated manner, points out, the beneficial results of inoculation had robbed the disease of its terrors to so great an extent that the rich and powerful no longer made the efforts which they formerly did to prevent its. entrance into, or its spread in, their neighbourhood, and thus Peon its spread among the unprotected poor; so that inoculation though eminently useful to the rich appeared to be injurious to the poor. Adding, therefore, together the cases of inoculated small-pox, and the 670 SUPPLEMENTARY APPENDIX. cases of natural small-pox of which the inoculated cases were in one way’ or other the cause, it seems probable that inoculation did tend to increase the prevalence of small-pox ; but there are no recorded data to show that this really was the case, and this supposed influence may have been counterbalanced by other influences. The evidence as to the influence which inoculation had on the mortality from small-pox is in many respects conflicting. Haygarth, though he admits that in other parts of the kingdom the practice may have saved many lives, was persuaded that in his own part of England and Wales the deaths by the small-pox had been augmented by it; and he points out that in London, Geneva, and other “towns in different situations and circumstances, the mortality from this distemper has increased since the introduction of inoculation.” Several writers in the _ latter part of the last, and the early part of the present century, held a similar view. Other writers, again, opposed this view. Tradition of the Dairy-folk. There was at the close of the eighteenth century, if not earlier, in districts where cow-pox had appeared, a belief among the dairy-folk that those who had taken the cow-pox never took the small-pox ; and indeed one Jesty, a Dorsetshire farmer, had in 1774, in the case of his wife and sons, purposely introduced the matter of cow-pox into the human subject with the view of protecting from small-pox. Cow-pox. Vaccinia or cow-pox is a disease affecting milch cows, and marked by an eruption on the udder and teats. The disease can be communicated from the cow to man. Dairymen and maids engaged in milking cows affected with cow-pox are apt to have sores of a special kind on their hands or elsewhere, the development of the sores being frequently accompanied by febrile symptoms. There can be no doubt that, in a certain number of cases at all events, such sores are the local manifestations of cow-pox ; the virus from the eruption on the cow being introduced into some scratch or other imperfection in the skin of the milker and there producing its local effects, accompanied more or less by general symptoms. Inoculation of Cow-poa. The practice, however, of inoculating with the matter of cow-pox, or vaccination as it was subsequently called, may be considered as dating from the publication of the “Inquiry into the Causes and Effects of the Variola Vaccine ” of Edward Jenner, published in the summer of the year 1798. The practice rapidly spread, and prevailed widely in this country and other parts of western Europe during the first quarter of the present century. It was, beyond all question, so adopted in the genuine belief that it afforded protection against small-pox. In the treatise to which reference has been made Jenner records in the first place a number (19) of cases in which a person who had accidentally taken cow-pox from the cow had never had small-pox, and appeared REPORT OF THE ROYAL VACCINATION COMMISSION, 671 incapable of taking that disease ; the insusceptibility being shown on the one hand by the failure to contract the disease after ample exposure to contagion, such as nursing and attending to or even sleeping with persons suffering from small-pox, and on the other hand by the fact that when the person in question was inoculated with the matter of small-pox in the manner then usual (the matter being tested as to its efficiency on susceptible persons) the inoculation failed to excite small-pox. In the course of the inoculation practice it had been observed that when the operation was performed upon a person who had already had small-pox, either naturally or by inoculation, the wound of inoculation, instead of developing, as it did when the operation was successful in a person who had not had the small-pox, into a vesicle and so into a pustule with the variolous characters (the development being accompanied by febrile symptoms and, save in exceptional cases, by the appearance of a smaller or greater number of variolous pustules on parts of the skin other than the seat of inoculation), presented as a rule nothing more than some slight inflammation, dying away in a few days without any other symptom, or even healed at once without any symptoms at all, local or general ; and in the exceptional cases in which further changes took place in the wound, these were not accompanied or followed by an eruption of pustules or even by the febrile and other general symptoms of small-pox. Accordingly, in cases of small-pox inoculation where it was doubtful whether the disease had been communicated, it had become not an uncommon practice to repeat the operation, in order to judge by the effects produced whether the earlier inoculation had or had not produced the disease ; and the practice, thus originating in connexion with small-pox inoculation, had come to be spoken of as the “ variolous test.”’ In his treatise Jenner distinguishes between what he calls true cow-pox and other eruptions which he speaks of as spurious, and which he regarded as not affording protection against small-pox, although he gives no details to show that the cases quoted by him as affording protection were cases of his true cow-pox. He also developed the view that matter derived from horses suffering from the disease known as the grease is capable of giving rise to cow-pox in the cow, and indeed is the real origin of the true disease. It may be added that Jenner also expressed the opinion that the protection thus afforded by cow-pox was permanent in character. Jenner further recorded in the same treatise how he had in 1796 inoculated a healthy boy of eight years of age in the arm with cow-pox matter taken from a sore on the hand of a dairymaid who had been infected with the disease by milking cows suffering from cow-pox. He describes the appearances subsequently presented by the wounds, and states that, six weeks afterwards, the results of inoculating the boy with variolous matter were those commonly seen to follow the inoculation of persons who had previously had the cow-pox or the small-pox : that is to say, the ‘‘ variolous test” showed the boy to be insusceptible to small- pox, Some months afterwards the boy was again inoculated, but no sensible effect was produced on the constitution. J enner then relates that subsequently, in the spring of 1798, he inoculated a child, and obtained a similar result with matter taken direvtly from the nipple of a cow infected 672 SUPPLEMENTARY APPENDIX. with cow-pox ; from the pustule on the arm of this child he inoculated another, and from this again several, and from one of these latter a fourth in succession, and then a fifth. To three of these the “ variolous test” was applied, and it is stated with the same results. Woodville’s Lymph. The experiences of Jenner did not stand alone. His results and views attracted great attention, and in the early part of the year 1799 Woodville and Pearson, who were physicians to the Small-pox Hospital in London, commenced making experiments with vaccine matter with a view to ascertain whether it afforded protection against small-pox. They arrived, like Jenner, at the conclusion that it did. In January 1799 Woodville, having found cow-pox to be present in a “dairy” at Gray’s Inn Lane, inoculated seven persons at the Small- pox Hospital with matter from one of the cows at the “dairy,” and other persons with matter from sores on a dairymaid employed at the same place who had become infected from the cows, From these cases he inoculated in succession others at the Hospital, eventually to the number of many hundreds, and thus established the stock of what has been spoken of as ‘ Woodville’s lymph.” Pearson also at the same time occupied himself with the question of inoculation with the cow-pox, writing a pamphlet about it. Woodville and he distributed to many persons in this country and abroad quantities of the lymph from the Hospital ; and this was the beginning of the more general practice of vaccination, for Jenner’s stock of lymph, the results of which he had described in his treatise, had come to an end. Although Woodville’s ‘ Hospital lymph” appears to have been widely distributed by himself and by Pearson, and thus to have been the source of the lymph used in various places in the early days of vaccination, it was not the only source, even in those days. Pearson also obtained lymph from cow-pox at a dairy in the Marylebone Road, and used this “in certain situations,” which may be presumed to include places elsewhere than in the Hospital. He also speaks of having obtained lymph from the cow from a third source. Jenner again, who received and used some of Woodville’s Hospital lymph, also obtained lymph from some other sources: for instance, from a cow at a Mr. Clark’s farm in Kentish Town. Further, Woodville in 1800 speaks of his having at various times procured the vaccine virus as ‘produced in different cows, which when used at the Hospital produced the same effects as the Gray’s Inn Lane lymph. We are not justified in assuming that an account of every new source of lymph was published ; and there may have been others, it is impossible to say how many, than those just mentioned. In any case Woodville’s Hospital lymph was not the only lymph used in those early days; not only, however, was it largely used (indeed, we have no evidence of so widespread a use of lymph derived from any other source), but the use of it marks the definite beginning of the practice of. vaccination ; and the history of it demands special notice. REPORT OF THE ROYAL VACCINATION COMMISSION. 673 Of the cases recorded by Woodville in his Reports, the larger number (about three-fifths)ipresented an important, and, as compared with Jenner’s cases, a new feature, in that, in addition to the changes taking place at the seat of inoculation and constituting what Woodville called the ‘‘cow-pox tumour,’’ which may here be spoken of as the “ vaccine vesicle,” an eruption over the body of a greater or less number of pustules was observed. These eruptive pustules occurred in the very first cases: of the seven cases inoculated from the cow, four, and of the five inoculated from the dairymaid, four, had such pustules ; and their appearance is recorded again and again in the series, down to the case which appears last but one in the tabular statement forming part. of the Reports. ’ Moreover, an eruption of pustules is described in certain of the cases. of which accounts were published at about the same time by Pearson and many others. In some of these cases the lymph used was supplied from the Small-pox Hospital by Woodville or Pearson. It must be admitted that these pustules were pustules of small-pox, and that, therefore, Woodville’s cases, which did so much to establish the practice of vaccination, were not cases simply of cow-pox but of cow-pox mixed, so to speak, with small-pox. It has indeed been maintained that Woodville’s cases were not cases of cow-pox at all— that small-pox was inadvertently introduced into the very first cases ; that the history of the whole series is the history of a series of small-pox cases putting on special characters, and that therefore the lymph used and distributed by Woodville and Pearson was in reality not cow-pox lymph but small-pox. lymph. A review of all the evidence available leads to no other conclusion than that, however much in Woodville’s, Pearson’s and other cases cow-pox was mixed up with small-pox, the lymph used and distributed by Woodville and Pearson and called by them cow-pox lymph (excluding of course all the cases, of which there were not a few, in which matter was taken not from the local “ cow-pox tumour” at the seat of inoculation, but from one of the eruptive pustules) was veritable cow-pox lymph having the true characters of cow-pox lymph only. It of course follows that the cases, both in Woodville’s practice and jn that of others, in which the inoculation of cow-pox matter was. accompanied by an eruption of pustules, due to small-pox being present as well as cow-pox, when appealed to as showing immunity against small-pox (by the test either of exposure to contagion or of inoculation), furnished false evidence as to that immunity being due to cow-pox ; it might have been due to the accompanying small-pox. So far then as the adoption of vaccination was assisted by cases of this description, it. may be held to have rested on erroneous data. The Decline of Small-pox. One effect of the introduction of vaccination was a very great decrease in the practice of inoculation, which had become very prevalent during the later part of the previous century. And the view has been ve forward 3) 674 SUPPLEMENTARY APPENDIX. that, the prevalence of inoculation having greatly increased the amount of small-pox, the diminution of small-pox in question was the result of the decrease of inoculation. The question how far the behaviour of small-pox in the eighteenth century and earlier was influenced by sanitary conditions, is one rendered difficult by the lack of exact information. We may distinguish between overcrowding as one insanitary condition and all other insanitary condi- tions, such as lack of cleanliness and the like. A priori we should ex- pect that a dense population, especially one of great internal movement, and one in continual interchange with surrounding populations, by offering greater facilities for the conveyance of contagion, would lead to a greater amount of small-pox. London was a conspicuous instance of the above, and the apparent greater prevalence of small-pox in London than in the provinces may be attributed to these causes: but it would appear that the increase was felt—as indeed would, a priori, seem pro- bable—rather in the constant presence of small-pox to a considerable amount at all times than in the mortality of the epidemics when these occurred. And the same seems also to be shown to a less extent in other large cities, such as Liverpool. But in this matter of dense and moving populations the eighteenth century did not differ markedly from the early part of the nineteenth, We might @ priori expect the other acknowledged imperfect sanitary conditions of the eighteenth century to increase the fatality of, and so to a corresponding extent the mortality from, small-pox ; but there is no exact evidence to confirm this supposi- tion. If on the contrary we recognise that in the course of the eighteenth century the general mortality, the relative number of deaths from all causes, went on decreasing, and attribute, as has been done, this decrease to improved sanitary conditions, no like decrease of small-pox took place. Again, the places which were deemed the most salubrious appear to have been visited by epidemics of small-pox as severe as those which fell on unhealthy places. Thus the epidemic in Chester in 1774 was undoubtedly a severe one, and yet Haygarth writes, ‘‘The healthiness of Chester,” as shown by statistics, must appear so very extraordinary as to be almost incredible.” And in general both the incidence of, and mortality from, small-pox seem to have been far less affected by sanitary conditions than might a priori have been expected. It may be urged against the view that the decline of small-pox was due to improved sanitary conditions, in the first place, that, admitting the introduction of sanitary improvements, no evidence is forthcoming to show that during the first quarter of the nineteenth century these improvements differentiated that quarter from the last quarter, or half, of the preceding century in any way at all comparable to the extent of the differentiation in respect to small-pox. In the second place, admitting & priori that crowded dwellings tend to increase the liability to contagion, and so the prevalence of the disease, while other insanitary conditions tend in addition to increase the fatality among those attacked, so that insanitary conditions as a whole must tend to increase the mortality from small-pox,—no evidence is forthcoming which distinctly shows that the dependence of the prevalence of, or the mortality from, REPORT OF THE ROYAL VACCINATION COMMISSION. 675 small-pox, on the lack of sanitary conditions, was a feature of the history of small-pox during the eighteenth century. Upon the whole, then, we think that the marked decline of small-pox mortality in the first quarter of the present century affords substantial evidence in favour of the protective influence of vaccination, Age Incidence of Small-pox. A study of the age incidence of small-pox mortality is very instructive. In connexion with this point it is necessary to bear in mind that experi- ence has led to the conclusion that, whatever be the protective effect of vaccination, it is not absolutely permanent ; the most convinced advocates of the practice admit that after the lapse of nine or ten years from the date of the operation its protective effect against an attack of small-pox ‘rapidly diminishes, and that it is only during this period that its power in that respect is very great ; though it is maintained that, so far as regards its power to modify the character of the disease and render it less fatal, its effect remains in full force for a longer period, and never altogether ceases. The experience upon which this view is founded is derived almost exclusively from the case of infantile vaccination. It has been supposed by some that the transitory character of the protection results from -changes connected with the growth from infancy to adult years. Whether this be so or not, we have no means of determining. No doubt, when Jenner drew the attention of the public to the value -of vaccination, he believed that a single successful inoculation of vaccine matter secured absolute immunity for the future from an attack of small- pox. It is certain that in this he was mistaken. It may well be doubted whether the anticipation was a reasonable one. No such immunity is secured by an attack of small-pox, though there are few who would maintain the proposition that it is without protective influence against another attack. A priori there would seem to be no sound ground for expecting that vaccinia would afford more potent protection than small- pox itself. The extent of the protection afforded (assuming that there is ‘some protective influence) could only be determined by experience. It soon became apparent that Jenner had, in the first instance, overrated the effect of vaccination. That he should thus have overestimated it is not to be wondered at, when the tendency to be unduly sanguine, which besets the discoverer of any new prophylactic, and, indeed, every discoverer, is borne in mind. ; We think, taking it all together, that the evidence bearing upon the question whether the vaccinated are less liable to be attacked by small-pox than the unvaccinated, points to two conclusions: first, that ‘there is, taking all ages together, less liability to attack among the vaccinated than among the unvaccinated ; and next, that the advantage in this respect enjoyed by vaccinated children under ten years of age is greatly in excess of that enjoyed at a more advanced period of life. In considering whether vaccination has been the principal cause of the decline, we must inquire whether the other causes suggested by those who deny the efficacy of vaccination will satisfactorily account for it. 676 SUPPLEMENTARY APPENDIX. Effect of Sanitation. It is said that the decline has, in the main, been due to changes in the general conditions of life in the different parts of the United Kingdom, apart from the spread of the practice of vaccination,—amongst other things, to improvement of sanitary conditions. It is beyond doubt that an infectious disease like small-pox is, other things being equal, more likely to spread in towns than in country districts, and more likely to spread in crowded town districts than in others not so densely populated ; so that we should expect a lessened proportion of overcrowded dwellings, by diminishing the opportunities for contagion, to check the prevalence of the disease and consequently to render its mortality less. Effect of Isolation. It has been maintained that the decline in small-pox mortality is largely due to more frequent and systematic attempts to isolate those suffering frora small-pox. We think an answer to this contention is to be found in the fact that it is only in quite recent years that there has been any systematic practice of isolating small-pox patients, and that it has been confined even then to a very limited number of localities. The fact to which we are about to call attention in greater detail than hitherto, that the decline in the deaths from small-pox is found almost. exclusively among those of tender years, appears also to militate against. the contention. The risk of contagion is not confined to children. Adults also are subject to it. If a better system of isolation had been a main cause of the reduced mortality, we should have expected to see it. operate in the case of adults as well as of children. . At the same time we are far from thinking, as will appear when we come to deal with that subject, that the efforts at isolation which have characterised recent. years have been without a beneficial effect on small-pox mortality. Sanitary Legislation. We have already pointed out that on & priori grounds it is reasonable to think that improved sanitary conditions would tend to diminish the fatality of, and so to a corresponding extent the mortality from, small-pox. And there can be no doubt that the period with which we are dealing has been characterised by an improvement of this description. There has been better drainage, a supply of purer water, and in other respects more wholesome conditions have prevailed. Tt may be useful at this point to furnish a brief summary of the principal Sanitary Acts which have been passed relating to the different. parts of the United Kingdom. In 1848 was passed the first great and comprehensive measure which may be called the groundwork of our sanitary legislation as regards England. The Public Health Act of 1848 was, however, principally designed for towns and populous places in England and Wales, not including the Metropolis, which was dealt with in Acts passed in the same year. The powers of local government supplied by the Act were generally an extension of those before given by sundry local Acts to REPORT OF THE ROYAL VACCINATION COMMISSION. 677 Commissioners of Sewers in the Metropolis, and to authorities in a few large towns. Many provisions corresponding to sections in the Towns Improvement Clauses Act of 1847 are found in the Public Health Act, and communities were thus enabled to obtain by a simple process powers which they could not previously obtain except by a local Act incorporating sections of the Towns Improvement Clauses Act. In 1848 was also passed the Nuisances Removal and Diseases Preven- tion Act of that year, in substitution for a similar Act of 1846 which was about to expire; and in 1849 this Act of 1848 was amended. The provisions of all these three Acts extended to England, Scotland and Ireland. In 1855 a comprehensive Nuisance Removal Act was, as regards England, substituted for the Acts passed in 1848 and 1849; and in the following year there was similar legislation for Scotland. In 1860 the English Act was amended ; and in 1866, by the Sanitary Act of that year (to which we shall again refer), the provisions of the English Acts of 1855 and 1860, as then amended, were applied to Ireland. In 1855, by the Metropolitan Local Management Act of that year, provision was made for the appointment of a medical officer of health and an inspector of nuisances by every vestry and district board in the Metropolis. This provision did not extend to the City of London, where, in 1848, a medical officer of health had been appointed under power given by a local Act. In 1858, the Local Government Act of that year, to be construed with the Public Health Act of 1848 as one Act, was passed, and took effect in all places where that Act was in force at the time of its passing ; and, as regards England, these two Acts together constituted until 1872 the principal sanitary legislation on the statute-book. There followed, however, within the next ten years many public Acts having sanitary objects, some applying to all, and some to particular, parts of the United Kingdom, besides numerous other Acts of local application. We need only now specially refer to one of these public statutes—the Sanitary Act of 1866, which was probably the most important, and applied, in part at least, to England, Scotland and Ireland, This Act, amongst — other things, extended the powers of local authorities for the disposal of sewage, and, in amending the English Nuisances Removal Acts of 1855 and 1860, added to the definitions of nuisances, especially as regards crowded houses and workshops, and to the duties and powers of local authorities for their abatement, especially in the way of providing means for disinfection and places for the reception of dead bodies. In 1867 the Public Health (Scotland) Act was passed—a comprehensive measure which consolidated into one Act, with certain amendments, the whole statute law relating to the public health in Scotland. In 1872 a complete distribution of England into sanitary districts took place, and some further amendments were made in the sanitary laws. In 1875 these laws were consolidated in the Act of that year. In 1891 a Sanitary Act was passed relating to the Metropolis. In 1874 an Act was passed for Ireland, containing substantially the game provisions as those which had been enacted in the case of England in 1872. 678 SUPPLEMENTARY APPENDIX. Value of Vaccination. We have not disregarded the arguments adduced for the purpose of showing that a belief in vaccination is unsupported by a just view of the facts. We have endeavoured to give full weight tothem. Having done so, it has appeared to us impossible to resist the conclusion that vaccination. has a protective effect in relation to small-pox. We think :— 1. 2% 3. That it diminishes the liability to be attacked by the disease. That it modifies the character of the disease, and renders it (a) less fatal, and (0) of a milder or less severe type. That the protection it affords against attacks of the disease is. greatest during the years immediately succeeding the operation of vaccination. Jt is impossible to fix with precision the length of this period of highest protection. Though not in all cases the same, if a period is to be fixed, it might, we think, fairly be said to cover in general a period of nine or ten years. . That after the lapse of the period of highest protective potency, the efficacy of vaccination to protect against attack rapidly diminishes, but that it is still considerable in the next quin- quennium, and possibly never altogether ceases. . That its power to modify the character of the disease is also greatest in the period in which its power to protect from attacks is greatest; but that its power thus to modify the disease does not diminish as rapidly as its protective influence against attacks, and its efficacy during the later periods of life to modify the disease is still very considerable. . That re-vaccination restores the protection which lapse of time has diminished ; but the evidence shows that this protection again diminishes, and that, to ensure the highest degree of protection which vaccination can give, the operation should be at intervals repeated. . That the beneficial effects of vaccination are most experienced by those in whose case it has been most thorough. We think it may fairly be concluded that where the vaccine matter is. inserted in three or four places, it is more effectual than when introduced into one or two places only—and that if the vaccination marks are of an area of half a square inch, they indicate a better state of protection than if their area be at all considerably below this. . Question of Specific Protection or of Antagonism. When an attack of disease secures immunity or protection against. another attack of disease, the two attacks are, as a rule, attacks of the same disease. Some pathologists have, it is true, of late years been led to suppose that one disease may confer some degree of immunity or protec- tion against another different disease ; but instances of this are few, and, moreover, cannot be regarded as thoroughly established. The ordinary instances of immunity are so clearly those in which the attack, natural or REPORT OF THE ROYAL VACCINATION COMMISSION. 679 artificial, which confers the immunity is of the same disease as that towards which immunity is conferred, that identity of disease has been considered as eon to the conferring of immunity. And it has been argued that it is a priori improbable that cow-pox should confer immunity from small- pox, seeing that the two are different diseases. Such a purely theoretical argument can have little weight against positive evidence of vaccination having actually conferred immunity. If this be definitely proved to be the fact, proof is thereby at the same time afforded that the theory is unsound, either because a particular disease may confer immunity against a different disease, or because small-pox and cow-pox are not different diseases. For the practical object with which alone we are concerned, it is not material that we should reach any conclusion upon the question what is the real source of error in the theory alluded to, supposing it to be erroneous ? We shall content ourselves, therefore, with a very brief notice of the subject. It appears to us that we may dismiss for practical purposes the theoretical questions which were discussed before us so fully. If the fact be established that the introduction of vaccine matter and the consequent. vaccinia produce some effect upon the human body which renders it less susceptible to small-pox, or which modifies that disease when the small-pox virus enters the system, it will not be a strange or unwonted experience that we should be unable to explain how this comes about. Science has not yet succeeded in freeing therapeutics or kindred subjects from obscurity, or in solving all the problems which they present. The precise modus operandi by which a previous attack of a disease furnishes security against a subsequent attack by the same disease has not yet been elucidated. There can be no cause for astonishment, then, if we are unable to trace the steps by which vaccination exerts a protective influence, supposing the fact that it does so be established, nor is it essential that we should succeed in tracing them. Our inability to accomplish this does not seem to us to be the slightest reason for regarding with doubt the conclusions to which the facts lead us. : Professor Crookshank, than whom no one has more strongly insisted on the theoretical arguments against the protective influence of vaccination in relation to small-pox, gives it as his opinion that vaccination creates a transient antagonism to that disease. We understand his view to be that an attack of disease can only afford protection against the same disease, and that small-pox and cow-pox are not the same but different diseases. We gather, however, that, in his opinion, so long as the state of antagonism lasts, the person in whose system it exists is less likely to suffer from small-pox than he would be if the state of antagonism were wanting. This seems to us to amount in effect to the same thing as saying that. during that period vaccination has conferred some protection. Whether the effect be to create antagonism or to confer protection, and whatever difference there be between the modus operandi in the one case and in the other, we know equally little about it. If a condition of transient antagonism to small-pox is induced by vaccination, theoretical considera- tions will not afford a guide of the slightest value to the conclusions how long this transient antagonism will last, or how soon it will pass away. 680 SUPPLEMENTARY APPENDIX. Experience, and experience alone, can answer that question. A priori we do not see that there is any better reason for supposing that it would last for two or three years than that its duration would extend to ten years. Cow-pox and Small-pox not Convertible. Jenner himself, in his first paper, advanced the view that the cow-pox and small-pox were identical with each other; and since his time numerous observers have attempted to prove the identity of the two diseases experimentally—namely, by giving rise to cow-pox in the cow through the inoculation of small-pox matter, or by the introduction of contagion in other ways. It may at once be stated that while cow-pox is readily transferred from the cow to man and back again from man to the cow, the disease in man being identical with that in the cow, small- pox cannot be transferred from man to the cow so as to give rise toa disease in the latter identical in its features with the small-pox of man. Nor can cow-pox be so transferred to man as to give rise in him to small-pox. The two diseases are not in this sense convertible. Small-pox Vaccine. In most cases the attempt to transfer small-pox from man to the cow has had simply a negative result ; no obvious effect of any kind has been observed. This has been the case in the attempts to introduce the contagion through absorption by the respiratory or digestive organs, and in most of the attempts to introduce the contagion by inoculation. In certain instances these latter attempts have produced results which may be briefly described in three categories. (We may pass over the isolated experience of Thiele, who in 1838 asserted that by keeping small-pox matter sealed between glass plates for ten days before using it, and by diluting it with milk when using it for inoculation, the matter thus treated through ten removes through the human body—the cow not intervening at-all—was converted into something which gave results identical with those of ordinary vaccine matter. We are not aware of any attempt to corroborate this experiment.) The first category includes the experiments in which the inoculation of small-pox matter into the udder, or adjoining parts, of the cow gave rise at or near the seat of inoculation to a vesicle, either identical in visible characters with the ordinary vaccine vesicle produced by inocula- tion with the matter of cow-pox, or to a vesicle the features of which, while not corresponding wholly with those of a perfect vaccine vesicle, so closely resembled them as to justify the vesicle being called a vaccine vesicle. Further, the matter from a vesicle which at the first inoculation had not the characters of a perfect vaccine vesicle, when carried through a second or third remove in the cow, fully acquired those characters, and when transferred to man gave results indistinguishable from the ordinary vaccine vesicle. Indeed, lymph of such an origin has come into general use for vaccination purposes. Of the experiments, the best known or most quoted are those of Thiele (1838), Ceely (1840), Badcock (between 1840 and 1860), Voigt (1881), Haccius and Eternod (1890), King (1891), REPORT OF THE ROYAL VACCINATION COMMISSION. 681 Simpson (1892), and Hime (1892); but there are several others. The details of the experiment are very scanty in the cases of Thiele and Badcock, but more full in the others, especially, perhaps, those of Ceely and Haccius. In the second category may be placed the experiments of Klein and Copeman. Klein, who had in 1879 obtained in 31 trials what then appeared simply negative results, found in a renewed research in 1892 that the result of the first inoculation in the cow of small-pox matter was not a distinct vesicle but merely a thickening and redness of the wound. Lymph pressed from the thickened wound produced, when inoculated into a second cow, a like result, but rather more marked ; the thickening and reddening still further increased with a third and a fourth cow. Lymph squeezed from the wounds of the fourth cow produced in a child typical vaccine, and crusts from the child produced typical vaccine in a cow. Copeman obtained somewhat similar results ; the appearances increasing in three removes and approaching those of typical vaccine, but not reaching them. The third category consists of the results obtained in an elaborate inquiry conducted by a Commission of the Society of Medical Sciences at Lyons, with Chauveau at its head. Those results, reported in 1865, were briefly as follows :— Inoculation of the cow with small-pox matter in any one of the 30 animals used did not give rise to a vaccine vesicle. Nevertheless a definite result was obtained ; in the form, however, not of a vesicle, but of a thickening and inflammation of the wound ; when a puncture was employed this became a papule. Lymph squeezed from such a papule and inserted into a second animal gave rise to a like papule ; and this, again, might be used for a third animal, but often failed; and the effect could in no case be carried on through more than three or four removes. When the inoculation was repeated on an animal in which a previous inoculation had produced such a papule, no distinct papule was formed ; and, moreover, lymph squeezed from the seat of inoculation produced no effect at all when used for the subsequent inoculation of another animal. This shows that the development of the papule was the result of the specific action of the virus: The same is shown by the fact that no such papule was produced when the small-pox matter was inserted into an animal which had previously had cow-pox naturally or artificially, as well as by the fact that when an attempt was made to vaccinate, with vaccine matter of proved efficacy, an animal on which a papule had been so developed by inoculation with small-pox, the vaccination failed, though the animal had never had natural cow-pox or had never been vaccinated. The specific nature of the lymph of the papule is further shown by the fact that such lymph when used'on the human subject gave rise to verl- table small-pox. It has been urged that in this case the virus producing the effect was simply the old virus used in the inoculation, producing the papule and still clinging to the wound. This is disproved by the experience that lymph from a papule of the second remove also gave rise in the human subject to veritable small-pox. Thus Chauveau and his Commission found that small-pox implanted 682 SUPPLEMENTARY APPENDIX. in the cow gave rise to a specific effect which was not cow-pox btt was. of the nature of small-pox, though its manifestations in the cow were different from those of small-pox in man. They also obtained similar results in attempting to transfer small-pox to the horse. It must be admitted that the results finally obtained in some of the successful cases were indistinguishable from those of vaccination ; the: characters of the local vesicle, the absence of eruptive pustules and of contagiousness, show that the lymph thus apparently originating from small-pox in the hands of Ceely, Badcock, and others, was vaccine lymph. It has been urged that a vaccine vesicle making its appearance in the wound of inoculation with small-pox was due to the accidental intro- duction of cow-pox matter into the wound; the small-pox matter in the wound produced no effect, and the cow-pox matter its usual effect. Several considerations support this view. The cow is peculiarly suscep- tible to cow-pox. In some cases (Ceely, Voigt), the animal was vaccinated as well as inoculated with small-pox: thus, in Ceely’s first case, the animal was inoculated with small-pox on one side of the body, and a few days after vaccinated on the other side. In many cases the experiments were conducted in an animal vaccine establishment, the stalls, the operating tables, and the assistants being those used or engaged in vaccination. It is true that in some cases at least special precautions, sterilisation of instruments and the like, were taken to avoid the accidental introduction of cow-pox ; but in observations of this kind the difficulties of avoiding all such sources of error are notorious. Still the successful cases are now so numerous that it is difficult to resist the conclusion that the same accident could not have occurred in all, and that a transformation of small-pox into cow-pox—that is to say, into the artificially inoculated cow-pox which we call vaccine *—really took place. Accepting this view provisionally, it may be remarked that in most. cases the transformation was sudden and complete ; the small-pox virus, under the influence of the tissues of the cow, became immediately converted into vaccine virus, and this produced a typical vaccine vesicle. In some cases (ea. gv., that of Hime) the transformed virus produced its effect not in the wound of inoculation, or not chiefly so, but at some little distance from it. In some cases the characters of the vesicle first formed, though sufficiently distinct to justify the vesicle being called a vaccine vesicle, were not those of a perfect vaccine vesicle, but the lymph from such a vesicle, at least after one or two removes, gave rise to most typical vaccine vesicles. In Klein’s experiments the transformation was gradual. In his fourth cow, the virus was as yet not typical vaccine, since it did not produce a typical vesicle ; yet it was so far already vaccine that, transferred to the child, it produced typical vaccine (unless we suppose some accidental introduction of vaccine to have taken place). That the vesicle on the child was vaccine, and not small-pox unaccompanied by eruptive pustules, was shown not only by its characters but also by the fact that lymph from it produced typical vaccine in the cow. In Chauveau’s experiments no transformation at all took place. * The italics are mine.—E.M.C. REPORT OF THE ROYAL VACCINATION COMMISSION. 683 As has been urged in another place, there are no adequate reasons leading us to believe that in the human subject the small-pox virus and the cow-pox virus can so act on each other as to form a hybrid disease. But this does not preclude the view that, accepting the conclusion that the body of the cow has the power to convert small-pox into vaccine, the virus may exist for a while in a phase in which, while ceasing to be typical small-pox, it has not yet fully acquired the characters of vaccine, and we may regard Klein’s results as illustrating this. In some of the experiments—for instance, those of Ceely and Voigt—the results obtained with the lymph of the vesicle produced by the inoculation of small-pox give rise to the suspicion that the lymph had small-pox qualities, as seen, for example, in the case of Ceely’s assistant, Taylor ; but the facts cannot be said to be more than suspicious—they are not decisive. Moreover, admitting that the vesicle itself in such cases was the result of the trans- formed virus, some not transformed old virus might still remain dormant in the wound, and might be present in the lymph of the vesicle, mixed with the transformed and generating virus; this old virus might have happened to be in excess on the point of the lancet which wounded Taylor. Smaill-pox Vaccine—Cow-pox Vaceine—Horse-pox Vaccine—Cattle- plague Vaceine—Sheep-pox Vaceine. Taking all the various facts into consideration, we seem led to the provisional conclusion that under certain conditions the tissues of the cow are able to transform small-pox into vaccine, that these conditions may be such as to lead to the transformation being sudden and complete, that under certain other conditions the transformation may be gradual and incomplete, and that under certain other conditions (and these seem most commonly to obtain) the transformation into vaccine does not take place at all. But what the above conditions are has not as yet been - clearly made out. It has been suggested that one condition favourable to the transformation is extreme youth of the subject: to effect the change the animal used should be a calf of not more than three or four months old ; but this is not definitely proved. Until these favourable conditions have been clearly recognised, so that, the conditions being fulfilled, the transformation will always be secured, the conclusion cannot be regarded as indisputable. Moreover, it must be borne in mind that effects more or less closely resembling a vaccine vesicle have been at various times obtained by various observers through inoculating man or the cow or another animal with material other than that obtained from the pustules of the small-pox of man. Much discussion has taken place concerning the “ grease ” of the horse, which Jenner believed to be the origin of the cow-pox of the cow. Without entering into any discussion of the matter, it may be said that investiga- tion has shown that horses do suffer from a malady which, transferred to the cow, gives rise to a vaccine identical apparently with that produced by the inoculation of the natural cow-pox. Hence this malady is spoken of as the “horse-pox,” and some cases at least of so-called ‘ grease” appear to be cases of this horse-pox. But it is at least not proved that 684 SUPPLEMENTARY APPENDIX. all the cases of “grease” which by inoculation were found to give rise to vaccine vesicles in man were cases of true horse-pox. And this at least must be said, that no investigations as complete and varied as those which have been carried out with regard to the development of vaccine vesicles through the inoculation of small-pox matter, have been carried out with regard to the alleged development of vaccine vesicles by the inoculation -of other material, such as the matter from the eruptions of the sheep-pox, the cattle plague, and the like. Nor have there been like extended in- -quiries as to the production of vesicles resembling those of vaccine by the inoculation of small-pox matter into animals other than the cow or the horse ; such results as have been obtained by observers are conflicting. ‘There is still room for much inquiry ; meanwhile it may be said that, in any case, the evidence in favour of a possible transformation of small-pox into vaccine is.sufficiently strong. to remove the force of the theoretical objection to the power of vaccination to secure immunity towards small- pox, on the ground that the two diseases are absolutely distinct. Risks of Vaccination. It must not be forgotten that the introduction into the system of even a mild virus, however carefully performed, is necessarily attended by the production of local inflammation and of febrile illness. If these results did not in some measure follow, the practice would probably fail in its protective influence. As a rule, the inflammation and illness are of a trifling character,; in exceptional cases, however, they may exhibit more severity, and, as certain facts submitted to us in evidence have shown, there are cases, though these are rare, where a general eruption may follow vaccination. In order to determine how far the risk of erysipelas is a necessary incident of vaccination, what is the extent of that risk, and how it may best be avoided, it is necessary to consider the various circumstances which may occasion erysipelas and allied diseases in the case of vaccinated children. It is established that lymph contains organisms, and may contain those which under certain circumstances would be productive of erysipelas. It is therefore possible that some contagious material (the specific virus of erysipelas, for instance,) may be conveyed at the time of vaccination, owing either to its presence in the lymph employed, or to its being conveyed by the vaccinator himself, or by those with whom the ‘child comes in contact at the time of vaccination. We believe that the cases in which the virus is conveyed at the time of vaccination are rare. It has, however, in some instances been clearly established, the immediate occurrence of erysipelas in several co-vaccinees making it practically certain that some virus was conveyed at the time of the operation. In some instances where this has been the case, and there is every reason for believing that the contagion was conveyed through the medium of the lymph, it is nevertheless in evidence that the vaccinifer did not display anything more than a slightly inflamed arm. The scrupulous avoidance of inflamed arms in vaccinifers will do much to reduce the risk of conveying erysipelas in the act of vaccination (a risk which, as we have REPORT OF THE ROYAL VACCINATION COMMISSION. 685- Seen, has been proved to be a very slight one), but it is possible it would not wholly remove it. We have dwelt upon features presented by the cases of erysipelas and various forms of septic disease which have followed vaccination, because- they suggest precautions which may be adopted to lessen, if not to. prevent, such evils in the future. If, for example, vaccination were performed at the patient’s home instead of ata public vaccination place,. the chance of disease being contracted at the time of vaccination would be to some extent diminished ; and the same may be said of the inspection of the vaccinated person which takes place eight days after the operation. On these points we shall have some remarks and recommendations to- make at a later stage of our report. A study of the cases which have been made the subject of careful examination and report points to the conclusion that an exercise of greater care would largely diminish the risk, already small, of erysipelas-. contagion and blood-poisoning. Although it may be confidently hoped that by additional care on the part both of vaccinators and parents, the number of inflamed arms and of cases of erysipelas may be reduced to very few, yet it is not to be expected that such occurrences will be wholly prevented. A vaccination wound is, like one from any other cause, so long as it exists, a source of some risk. The use of calf-lymph, though it may be supposed to be more free- from the risk of conveying erysipelas, does not appear to prevent inflamed arms. Some witnesses have indeed supposed that it is attended with more risk of inflammation than the employment of that taken from the. human subject. This opinion has not, however, been corroborated by some of those of widest experience. Nothing has produced so deep an impression hostile to vaccination as the apprehension that syphilis may be communicated by it. It was at one time doubted whether syphilis could result, and it was even confi-. dently asserted that it could not. The fact that this was possible had been fully established, and was generally acknowledged by the medical profession, before we commenced our inquiries. The very close resemblance in certain very rare cases of the results of vaccination, whether with calf-lymph or humanised lymph, to those attributed to syphilis (a resemblance so close that it has caused in a few cases a difference of opinion whether the disease was syphilis or vaccinia) has led to the expression by Dr. Creighton of the opinion that there is some essential relationship between the two diseases. This, however,. is a point of speculative, almost it might be said of transcendental pathology, upon which for practical purposes it is useless to enter. Tt must be sufficient to remark that, whatever may be the relationship. alluded to, it exists, if it exists at all, equally between small-pox and syphilis as between vaccination and syphilis. For all practical purposes. variola and vaccinia are both wholly distinct from syphilis, and their differences are, with the rarest exceptions, easily recognised, They are alike in being attended by affections of the skin and mucous membranes, and exceptionally by disease of the bones, eyes, and other parts ; but in all. 686 SUPPLEMENTARY APPENDIX. these it is a question of resemblance and not of identity with which we have to deal. Only a few items of the evidence produced before us appear to require special notice : among these, the most prominent is what has been known as the “Leeds case,” . upon which we have heard the evidence of Mr. Ward, Mr. Littlewood and Dr. Barrs. The witnesses named regarded it as a case of syphilis, conveyed by vaccination, but all of them admitted that the course of events was most unusual. We have carefully investigated this case, and notwithstanding the opinion formed by the witnesses, there appears good reason to doubt whether it was one of syphilis. The case was made the subject of careful inquiry by Dr. Barlow on our behalf, who shared the doubt we have expressed. The view taken by the medical inspector of the Local Government Board who in the first instance in- vestigated the case was that it was a case of hereditary syphilis. It seems certain, however, that the parents of the child whose death was in question were not in any way affected with syphilis. The vaccinifer also appeared to be free from any taint of that disease, and its family history confirmed this view. The co-vaccinees from the same lymph also exhibited no trace of syphilis. These facts of themselves make out a strong case against that having been the nature of the disease. Coupled with the fact that it could not have been communicated by the vaccinator himself, they seem to render it practically impossible that syphilis was the cause of death. If the symptoms exhibited had in all respects corresponded with those which are known to characterise syphilis, the proper inference might have been that there was some error in ascertaining the facts of the case. But it is beyond question that the course of events was very different in some respects from that experienced in undoubted cases of syphilis, and we think the true conclusion is that it was nota case of that disease. It may probably be classed with a few others as examples of gangrene and blood- poisoning, the direct result of vaccination, which are not to be explained by supposing the introduction of any syphilitic or other poison. Fortu- nately, such cases are extremely rare—so much so that the witnesses concerned knew of no case precisely parallel. The evidence offered to us would lead to the belief that, whilst with ordinary care the risk of communication of syphilis in the practice of arm- to-arm vaccination can for the most part be avoided, no degree of caution can confer an absolute security. The rejection as vaccinifers of young ‘infants, say below four months of age (in whom congenital syphilis may be as yet undeclared), and of adults (in whom the disease may possibly have been recently acquired) are precautions which would probably shut out almost the whole of the risk. The outbreaks of syphilis in connection with vaccination which have been mentioned to the Commission (all of which had been previously published) have occurred chiefly in.arm-to-arm vaccination amongst soldiers, or from the use as vaccinifers of young infants the offspring of parents whose history was not known to the vaccinator. It must, however, be admitted that neither the examination of the vaccinifer if taken alone, and without a knowledge also of the parents, nor the most scrupulous avoidance of any visible admixture of blood with the lymph, are in themselves, however valuable, sufficient \ REPORT OF THE ROYAL VACCINATION COMMISSION. 687 absolutely to exclude risk. The evidence given by Dr. Husband, of the Vaccine Institution of Edinburgh, established the fact that all lymph, however pellucid, does really contain blood cells. Absolute freedom from risk of syphilis can be had only when calf-lymph is used ; though where the antecedents of the vaccinifer are fully ascertained, and due care is used, the risk may for practical purposes be regarded as absent. It is obvious that the employment of ealf-lymph only would wholly exclude the risks as regards both syphilis and leprosy. Respecting the latter disease, however, there appears to be reason to doubt whether any risk exists, and at any rate it does not concern the British population. Even in leprosy districts the employment of English human lymph would be, so far as leprosy is concerned, as safe as that from the calf. There can be no doubt that vaccination ought to be postponed when -erysipelas, scarlet fever, measles, or chicken-pox are prevalent in the neighbourhood of the child’s residence, or, if the child is not to be vaccinated at home, either there or near the place of vaccination. Here again there would be « gain if the home was more often the place of vaccination. It would, in our opinion, be an advantage if the postponement of vaccination were expressly permitted, not only on account of the state of the child, but of its surroundings and any other conditions rendering the operation at the time undesirable. If more discretion in this respect were possessed and exercised, we think untoward results would become even rarer than they are. We are quite alive to the objections which may be urged against a prolongation of the period within which vaccination must be performed. Jt will naturally be said that a number of children, who otherwise would ‘be protected against small-pox, would be left without that protection, and would thus be liable to suffer from the disease themselves, and be a source of danger to others. It must be remembered, however, that so long as children cannot walk, the risk of their contracting contagion is less than if they were able to move freely about and mix with other people, and that, for the same reason, the risk of their communicating -contagion to others is less, We cannot trace in the statistics relating to Scotland any grounds for believing that the later compulsory vaccination cage which prevails in that country.as compared with England has affected, to any substantial extent, the general small-pox mortality of Scotland, though no doubt it may have led to some deaths among children under six months of age which otherwise would not have taken place. We have already shown how satisfactory a position Germany has occupied in relation to small-pox since the year 1874. The age of com- pulsion in that country is the end of the next calendar year after birth. It is true that re-vaccination has been there made compulsory as well as primary vaccination ; but we think the experience of Germany is not without its bearing on the question we are now considering. Wherever the line is drawn, whether at three months or six months, it will always leave a class of unvaccinated persons. The age to be fixed isa question of policy into which many considerations must enter. If an extension of the age within which vaccination was required rendered its untoward 688 SUPPLEMENTARY APPENDIX. incidents fewer in number, and diminished hostility to the operation, it- may be that on the whole it would promote the cause of vaccination, and secure, as its result, that the number of vaccinated persons would be greater than at present. Means, other than Vaccination, for diminishing the Prevalence of Small-pox ; and how far such means could be relied on in place of Vaccination. Another question upon which we are asked to report is, what means, other than vaccination, can be used for diminishing the prevalence of small-pox ; and how far such means could be relied on in place of vaccination. The means, other than the inoculation of small-pox or cow-pox, which have been referred to by witnesses as being capable of diminishing the prevalence of small-pox, are such means as have been employed against infectious diseases generally ; they may be summarised as—(1) Measures directed against infection, ey., prompt notification, isolation of the infected, disinfection, etc. ; (2) Measures calculated to promote the public health, the prevention of overcrowding in dwellings or on areas, cleanliness, the removal of definite insanitary conditions, etc. The principle underlying the practice of isolation with its accompany- ing machinery is obviously the very opposite of that which recommended the practice of inoculation ; it aims at exclusion of the disease, whereas. inoculation aimed at universal acceptance by artificially “sowing or “buying” the disease. Except in regard to the plague, our knowledge and practice of measures of isolation and quarantine against epidemics is of relatively recent growth. As the result of increased knowledge of the mode of propagation of infectious diseases, of greater sanitary activity, and under the stimulus of legislation, organised effort, more or less thorough, is now, in this as in other countries, directed against the spread of dangerous infectious diseases. Side by side with a vaccination system, means of isolation, etc., have been successfully employed to check the ‘spread of small-pox. They have also been sometimes so employed in recent years in places where vaccination has fallen into disuse. It will be well to commence with a brief statement of the growth of our knowledge on the subject of isolation as a means of dealing with infectious or contagious diseases. We have already adverted to the fact- that small-pox is highly contagious, and that contagion from those suffering from it is the means by which the disease is propagated, Although reference to infection appears in some of the Arabian writers, the contagiousness of small-pox attracted little attention in this country and in western Europe until the eighteenth century. Sydenham (1624-89), though he refers to the contagiousness of small-pox, did not dwell upon the matter, and did not regard it as so important an element in the spread. of the disease as some peculiar constitution of the atmosphere to which he attributed epidemics. Boerhaave was the first, at the commencement of the eighteenth century, distinctly to formulate the now generally accepted doctrine that small-pox arises only from contagion. In 1720, Mead drew up an elaborate system of notification, isolation, disinfection, etc., in view of a threatened invasion of the plague ; but no REPORT OF THE ROYAL VACCINATION COMMISSION. 689 attempt to deal with small-pox in a similar fashion appears to have been made until the last quarter of the eighteenth century. This was in all probability largely due to the adoption of inoculation as the recognised defence against small-pox, and the acceptance of Sydenham’s doctrine of epidemic causation may have exercised an influence in the same direction. No writer appears to have suggested methods of isolation, disinfection, ete., against small-pox prior to 1763. In that year Rast of Lyons published his “ Reflections on Inoculation and Small-pox, and upon the means which might be taken to deliver Europe from that malady.” He maintained— (1) That small-pox was not a necessary and inevitable malady ; (2) That it arose only from contagion ; (3) That it resembled plague in most of its features. His conclusion was expressed in these terms: ‘“‘T say, that to “deliver Europe from small-pox we must act upon principles directly “ opposed to inoculation ; far from multiplying the contagion, we must “keep it away by taking the same precautions and employing the same “ measures against that malady as have proved so successful against leprosy “and the plague.” The earliest account of the practical employment of such means is from Rhode Island, U.S.A. Haygarth, on the authority of Drs. Moffat and Waterhouse, states that for many years prior to 1778 small-pox had been successfully prevented from becoming epidemic there by regulations for isolation of the infected on a neighbouring small island specially used for that purpose, and for quarantining infected vessels, destruction of infected clothing, etc. Moreover, inoculation was discouraged at Rhode Island, and those who wished to be inoculated had to go to some place away from the Island, and were not to return until there was no danger of their infecting others. A passage in Dimsdale’s work on Inoculation, published in 1781, shows that in some towns of England pest-houses were beginning to be used for small-pox. In 1784 Haygarth, of Chester, published his “ Inquiry how to prevent the Small-pox,” and in 1793 “A Sketch of a Plan to exterminate the Small-pox from Great Britain.” The great epidemic of smiall-pox at Chester in 1774, to which allusion has already been made, was the occasion of Haygarth’s first attempts at organised dealing with epidemics of small-pox with a view to preven- tion. In his “Inquiry” he combated Sydenham’s doctrine that epidemics are due to some occult condition of the atmosphere, and argued that small-pox was always spread by infection only. He further maintained that the variolous poison could be carried as an infection for a little distance only through the air, and “ consequently that the small-pox may be “ prevented by keeping persons liable to the distemper from approaching “within the infectious distance of the variolous poison till it can be “destroyed.” These views led him, upon the return of an epidemic in 1777, to propose a plan for the prevention of the natural small-pox, and in 1778 a society was formed to carry out the plan in Chester. The plan consisted on the one hand of a general inoculation at people’s homes at stated intervals, on the ground that the inoculated small-pox was far less fatal or injurious than the natural small-pox, and on the other hand of 44 690 SUPPLEMENTARY APPENDIX. “Rules of Prevention” based on Haygarth’s views of infection. In th report of the Society, called shortly ‘‘The Small-pox Society,” date September 1782, it is stated that in the four and a half years of it existence two general inoculations had been held, and that the death from small-pox had been greatly lessened. Great difficulties, howevei were met with. ‘“ A large proportion of the inhabitants” refused inocula tion, and a large proportion also, ‘‘ being fearless, or rather desirous, tha their children should be infected with the natural small-pox,” refused t obey the Rules of Prevention. Hence, though the same report state that the example of Chester had been followed by Liverpool, wher “a general inoculation was successfully executed in the autumn of 178 and another in the spring of 1782,” and in Leeds, where a genera inoculation was held in 1781 and another proposed in 1782, with sucl success that the Royal College of Physicians in Edinburgh appointed : committee to inquire into “ the modes of conducting the general inocula tions of the poor” thus adopted in these places, the plan met with sucl difficulties that it was ultimately abandoned. It will be observed that ; general inoculation was an essential part of the plan proposed anc carried out in 1778-82; but, writing in 178+, Haygarth looked forwarc to being able ultimately to dispense with inoculation, and in the prefac +o his later edition, published in 1793, he states more definitely that th: adoption of his Rules of Prevention without any general .inoculatior might exterminate small-pox in some country other than Great Britain It must be remembered, however, that Haygarth entertained the opinior that the infection of small-pox could not be carried through the air above about half a yard, and that no one could be infected by the clothes of : person visiting a small-pox patient provided that he kept beyond thi: distance from the patient. It is obvious that if this had been establishec the control of the disease by isolation would be a much simpler matte: than it really is. In the Medico-Chirurgical Review for 1796 there appeared an accoun’ of a work by Dr. Faust, of Leipsic, entitled “An Essay on the Duty ol “Man to separate persons infected with the Small-pox from those ir ‘Health, thereby to effect the extirpation of that disease equally fron “the towns and countries of Europe,” in which it was argued that the first person ill in a place is the only source from which all the rest perhaps hundreds and thousands, become affected, and that if he wer« put immediately into a situation where he could not injure by contact those who had not had the disorder, the spread of the disease would be ‘prevented. In the same Review for 1799 appeared an account of establishments for the extirpation of small-pox. The failure of inoculation to attain the ‘desired end is referred to, and legislation is urged to facilitate isolation lt is further stated that in 1796 the Prussian College of Physicians re ported favourably to the King on the project, and that at Halberstadt ii had been resolved to establish a house for the purpose. At Cédte d’Or ix France a similar plan had been tried with success. In 1798 Jenner’s “Inquiry” was published, and in the early years of thi: century inoculation began to be discouraged ; for a while the prospects o1 REPORT OF THE ROYAL VACCINATION COMMISSION. 691 annihilating small-pox by vaccination appear to have superseded, in the minds of many, the plans of Haygarth and others. Some vaccinators, however, like Willan and Ring, still looked to methods of quarantine and to national and municipal regulations promoting isolation to exterminate the small-pox. It is worthy of notice, too, that Haygarth himself, in a letter quoted by Dr. Cappe of York in a communication to the London Medical and Physical Journal (vol. iv., p. 429), dated October 13th, 1800, remarked, “ An introduction of the vaccine still more than of the variolous inocula- tion would effectually promote the great object of my publications.” Prior to the year 1866 there was no provision made by law for enabling sanitary authorities to establish hospitals for infectious diseases, and thus to promote the isolation of such cases. The only institutions of that description then existing were the result of private effort. So far as regards small-pox there was, practically speaking, no provision for its treatment by means of isolation. The Sanitary Act of 1866 empowered, though it did not compel, local authorities throughout England and Wales, Scotland and Ireland, to provide or to join in providing isolation hospitals for the use of the inhabitants of their districts. There was further legislation on the subject by the Public Health Act, 1875; the Public Health (London) Act, 1891 ; the Public Health (Scotland) Act, 1867 ; and the Public Health (Ireland) Act, 1878, into the details of which it is not necessary to enter. The most recent Act relating to the matter is the Isolation Hospitals Act of 1893, which applies to the small towns and rural districts of England and Wales. . Stamping-out System in Leicester. Leicester suffered severely from small-pox in 1872, 346 deaths having been registered as caused by it. Two deaths from that disease occurred in 1873, but no other until 1877, when there were six, and one in the following year. The next year in which small-pox deaths were registered was 1881. There were two in that year, and five and three in the follow- ing years. No other death took place until 1892 and 1893, in which years the fatal cases numbered 21. ; Prior to 1875 the vaccination laws were well observed in Leicester. In that year the number of children born who were unaccounted for was only some 4 per cent. Since then there has been, as we have seen, a marked and progressive decline in the number of vaccinations, especially since 1883, until at the present time 80 per cent. of the children born remain unvaccinated. The borough hospital for infectious diseases was erected in 1871-2 outside the town; though within the last few years houses have been built in proximity to it. It appears to have been with Dr. Crane, the Medical Officer of Health in 1875, that the quarantining the inmates of an infected house, in addition to isolating the patient, originated. His successor, Dr. Johnston, established it in 1877 as a regular system. He was aided in this, after 1879, by the notification of infectious diseases then rendered compulsory by a private Act which Leicester, anticipating 692 SUPPLEMENTARY APPENDIX. most other towns, obtained in that year. Dr. Johnston reported that up to 1884 the spread of small-pox from imported cases had been arrested in 20 instances by the means he adopted. His successor, Dr. Tomkins, though, like his predecessors, regretting the increasing disuse of vaccination, bore testimony in his annual reports to the efficacy of the measures adopted in Leicester, and expressed his opinion that had such a system been in force at Sheffield in 1887 it would not have suffered in the way it did. In 1892 small-pox became prevalent in different parts of England, especially in Lancashire and Yorkshire. Many of the large provincial towns suffered, and Leicester amongst them. There were, in 1892-3, 357 cases of small-pox in Leicester, of whom 21, or 5°8, died ; 193 households were invaded, containing 1234 persons. The first importation was by a tramp, whose disease, passing unrecognised, caused infection at a common lodging-house and at the workhouse. Eleven other importations of the disease by tramps occurred in the course of 1892-3. Leicester suffered less than many of the other large towns which have been invaded by small-pox during recent years, both in the number of cases and in the number of deaths. In connection with this, however, a point to which we have already called attention must be borne in mind. The disease was remarkably slight there in its fatality, even as regards those who, by reason of their age, could not be affected by the change of practice in relation to vaccination. Dr. Priestley, the Medical Officer of Health, claims, in his report to the Sanitary Committee for 1893, that it was by reason of the energetic methods adopted that the disease had been prevented running riot through the town. His claim may be well founded. At all events, the experience of Leicester affords cogent evidence that the vigilant and prompt application of isolation, etc., even with the defects which were brought to light during the recent epidemic, is a most powerful agent in limiting the spread of small-pox. It is true that the system and appliances which appeared adequate for some years failed to prevent a serious outbreak of small-pox in 1892-3. We think its value was none the less real. Stamping-out System in London. In the Report of the Royal Commission of 1881, already alluded to, suggestions were made with regard to notification and isolation which have since been largely carried into. effect. As we have said, it was con- sidered proved that the existing small-pox hospitals had caused a spread of the disease in their neighbourhood, We cannot but think that this may in some measure account for the greatly increased mortality from small-pox in London during the 1871-72 epidemic as compared with the rest of the country. It is true that the statistics relating to England and Wales outside the Metropolis include those of other large towns where the same evil was present ; but it probably did not exist there in so aggravated a form, and the effect may be neutralised by the statistics relating to smaller towns and rural districts with which they are combined. This idea has been suggested to us, as the result of the inquiry, how it has come about that whilst the Metropolis, in the decennium 1867-76, and again REPORT OF THE ROYAL VACCINATION COMMISSION. 693 down to 1885, compared so unfavourably with the rest of the country, the condition has since that date become so entirely changed? We think it is impossible to attribute this change to vaccination. There is no reason to suppose that the position of the Metropolis in respect to vaccination has, since the year 1885, become superior to the rest of England and Wales: rather the other way, as the decrease in infantile vaccination has been greater during the last few years than in the rest of England and Wales. The change, therefore, must be due to some other cause. The hospitals which, in the opinion of the Commissioners, were propagating the disease in their neighbourhood, were in operation down to July 1882, when their Report was made. In 1877 and 1878, and again in 1881, small-pox was epidemic in London to a considerable extent. We have stated in detail in paragraph 471 * the steps which were taken by the Metropolitan Asylums Board in consequence of the recommenda- tions of the Royal Commission. It will be seen that the intra-urban hospitals still continued in use, and that complaints were made in 1884 that they were spreading small-pox in their vicinity, although the number in each of them was not allowed to exceed 50. In October 1884 this number was reduced to 25. It was not, however, until 1885 that the system now in operation was inaugurated, and all cases of small-pox were treated in hospital ships. . It is impossible not to be struck with the fact that it is since the year 1885 that the Metropolis has presented so satisfactory an aspect as regards small-pox mortality. The facts to which we have been calling attention certainly seem to point to the conclusion that this has been due to a system of isolation, well organised and administered, the beneficial effect of which is no longer neutralised by a spread of the disease from the hospitals in which the isolation is carried out. Upon the whole, we think the experience of London affords cogent evidence. of the value of a sound system of isolation in checking the spread of small-pox. ; Stamping-out System in Australia. The experience of isolation systems in Australia is interesting and worthy of special notice, because whilst in this country the quarantining of persons who have come in immediate contact with those suffering from small-pox has only been possible with the consent of the persons whom it was proposed to subject to quarantine, in Australia their removal to a place of isolation has been made compulsory. Australia, by virtue of its geographical position, and the consequent separation by long sea voyage from infected ports, enjoyed for a long time a sort of natural isolation. Thus, Hirsch, in his “ Historical and Geographical Pathology,” vol. i., pp. 133-4 (1881), remarks :— “The continent of Australia up to 1838 had enjoyed an absolute “jmraunity from small-pox ; towards the end of that year the disease “appeared at Sydney, having been imported probably from China ; it “Jasted, however, only a short time, and remained absent from the « continent until 1868. In that year it was introduced into Melbourne by « a ship, and again it spread only to a slight extent, and quickly died out. * Final Report. 694 SUPPLEMENTARY APPENDIX. “By a rigorous inspection of ships on their arrival, it has been found “possible to prevent subsequent importations, a notable instance of pre- “ vention having occurred in 1872. Tasmania has hitherto quite escaped “the disease ; so also has New Zealand, where an importation of it in “(1872 was prevented by strictly isolating a vessel that had arrived with * small-pox on board.” In New South Wales, Dr. MacLaurin, who has been President of the Board of Health since 1889, informed us that the Government act on the assumption that small-pox is an exotic disease, and that every case must have come from outside the colony, and it is therefore dealt with under a quarantine Act of William IV., originally instituted for dealing with cholera. By an Act passed in 1882, notification of small-pox was made compulsory on medical men and householders under heavy penalties. At Sydney notification of small-pox is followed up by the compulsory removal of the patient and all persons who have been in the house with the patient to the quarantine station at North Head. This station is 670 acres in extent, and situated on the peninsula at the mouth of Sydney Harbour, and is seven miles from the Health Office, with which there is telephonic and telegraphic communication. The persons are conveyed to the station by a steamboat comfortably fitted expressly for the purpose, and no difficulty has been experienced in effecting their removal. It was, in Dr. MacLaurin’s opinion, by carrying out this practice of isolation and quarantine that ‘‘ the epidemic of 1881-82 was suppressed,” and small-pox ‘‘has never become epidemic since this plan has been adopted.” The persons who have been in the house with the patient are detained 21 days in quarantine from the date of the last possible contagion. Should a case of small-pox arise among them, those who had been in contact with such infected person would be detained for a further period of 21 days, and so on. To facilitate this, the exposed persons are distributed in separate groups within the station. They are allowed to receive letters or parcels, etc., and a telegraph operator is employed, ‘‘ whose special business it is “to work the telegraph at their request.” ‘“ Reasonable compensation is “given by the Government for loss; ” and there are heavy penalties under the original Act whereby the quarantine is secured. The station is, accord- ing to Dr. MacLaurin, “a pleasant place to stay in, and everything is done “that can be done to make the people comfortable : they have nothing “whatever to do, and are free from all care, and they can spend the day “pleasantly enough ; but they do not like it.” No one, however, raises any objection to the Sydney system : “the people are all very sensible about it.” In all Australian towns the same system is carried out as strictly, with the result that there was not a case of small-pox in Australia on February 5th, 1890 ; and Dr. MacLaurin is of opinion that the risk of dying of small-pox in Australia is smaller than in any other part of the world. As regards vaccination :—In New South Wales it is very little practised ; there is no compulsory Act ; and though medical opinion is in favour of it, an opinion shared by Dr. MacLaurin, it is not likely that a compulsory Vaccination Act could be passed or would be tolerated. The proportion of young persons in New South Wales who are not vaccinated is accordingly very large ; probably much more than half of those under REPORT OF THE ROYAL VACCINATION COMMISSION. 695 ten years of age are unvaccinated. Although Dr. MacLaurin favours vaccination and respects it highly, he is satisfied that the system of isola- tion as supervised by him is perfectly successful. As President of the Board of Health he considered it his business to produce extinction of the disease ; he does not consider vaccination a sufficiently absolute protection for such purpose ; and he is “ fully of opinion that the only way in which “you can bring to an end an outbreak of small-pox, that is to say, bring “it under control, and not leave it to work itself out, is by notification ‘‘and isolation. Of course, in any small community, if you let the disease ‘in it will work itself out in time, because all the susceptible people will “have had it; but the only way in which you can absolutely control an “epidemic of small-pox is by a system of notification and isolation.” Small-pox has never been epidemic in Western Australia. Only one case has occurred within the last 31 years, and that was an imported one; quarantine was carried out, and no infection occurred ; the immunity from the disease is mainly at least due to isolation. Before 1879 vaccination was not generally practised—a great majority of those born in the colony were unvaccinated ; in that year a compulsory Vaccination Act was passed in consequence of Sir H. Ord and Dr. Waylen’s representations, and in consequence of reports of small-pox in other colonies, and not on account of the existence of small-pox in Western Australia. In Tasmania there was a compulsory vaccination Jaw, but it was found to be inoperative because no one was appointed to conduct the prosecu- tions, and it has now fallen into desuetude. The same system of isolation and quarantine is exercised as in the other Australian colonies; Small-pox was for the first time introduced into Tasmania in 1887, and although preparations for isolation were inadequate, the disease was soon stamped out. Communication between Launceston and Melbourne was temporarily suspended, and to this precaution the non-invasion of Victoria was attributed. The particulars of this, the first introduction of small-pox into Tasmania during the history of that colony, are to be found in a report to the Central Board of Health by Mr. A. Mault, dated Novem- ber 17th, 1887. The origin of the outbreak is not clear, but it was presumed to have been imported, probably by a ship from China, into Launceston. The earliest case reported to the Local Board of Health was on September 23rd, though it appears that earlier cases had passed unnoticed, or had been notified as measles. Thirty-three cases in all occurred, every one of which was traced to direct infection from the first. case. By September 27th a temporary hospital had been erected, and thither patients and suspects to the number of 72 were removed. The last case appeared on October 13th. Other persons who had been to the infected houses were isolated in ‘their houses and watched. Only four of the 47 persons quarantined at the station were attacked. The clothing was burnt, and very thorough disinfection of the infected houses was carried out, and the dead were interred in a special cemetery. The other colonies were communicated with, and quarantine, at first unduly rigid and after- wards relaxed, was practised against ships proceeding from Tasmania. Although vaccination had been nominally compulsory in Tasmania, it was estimated that two-fifths of the population were unvaccinated. 696 SUPPLEMENTARY APPENDIX. Suggested Stumping-out System in the United Kingdom. We have no difficulty in answering the question, what means other than vaccination can be used for diminishing the prevalence of small-pox ? We think that a complete system of notification of the disease, accom- panied by an immediate hospital isolation of the persons attacked, together with a careful supervision, or, if possible, isolation for sixteen days of those who had been in immediate contact with them, could not but be of very high value in diminishing the prevalence of small-pox. It would be necessary, however, to bear constantly in mind, as two conditions of success : first, that no considerable number of small-pox patients should ever be kept together in a hospital situate in a populous neighbourhood ; and secondly, that the ambulance arrangement should be organised with scrupulous care. If these conditions were not fulfilled, the effect might be to neutralise or even do more than counteract the benefits otherwise. flowing from a scheme of isolation. When we turn to the other branch of the inquiry, haw far such means could be relied on in the place of vaccination, we find ourselves involved in questions of a much more complicated matin: We have little or no experience to fall back upon. The experiment has never been tried. The nearest approach to a trial of it has probably been in Australia. But even in the parts of that country to which we have alluded the population has not been entirely unvaccinated, though there has been a large unvaccinated class amongst it. Moreover, in applying the experience of Australia to this country, two things must be borne in mind. In the first place small-pox has only appeared from time to time, introduced from without at one or other of the ports of the country, and the several colonies of which Australia is composed are of great territorial extent, with few large centres of population. In this country small-pox is always present in some part of it. There has not been a single year without several deaths from the disease. Large centres of population are numerous, and the intercourse between them constant. In the several colonies of Australia the number of ports is not great, the vessels which enter them are comparatively speaking not numerous, and the ports from which they arrive are many days’ voyage distant ; and there are careful arrangements for quarantining vessels to exclude disease. The shipping which enters English ports is of vast quantity, and passengers are brought in large numbers from the continent of Europe not only daily, but it may almost be said hourly ; the voyage, too, is but brief. The other matter to be remembered is, that part of the Australian system is the compulsory removal to quarantine for 21 days of thése who have been in the house with the patient, in addition to the transfer of the patient himself toa hospital. There can be no doubt that such a system, if completely carried out, would be of the highest efficacy. But it is obvious that in this country the practical difficulties of working such a scheme in the large towns would be really insuperable, to say nothing of the difficulty of procuring legislative sanction for it. REPORT OF THE ROYAL VACCINATION COMMISSION. 697 Value of Isolation. We can see nothing, then, to warrant the conclusion that in this country vaccination might safely be abandoned, and replaced by a system of isolation. If such a change were made in our method of dealing with small-pox, and that which had been substituted for vaccination proved ineffectual to prevent the spread of the disease (it is not suggested that it could diminish its severity in those attacked), it is impossible to contem- plate the consequences without dismay. To avoid misunderstanding, it may be well to repeat that we are very far from underrating the value of a system of isolation. We havealready dwelt upon its importance. But what it can accomplish as an auxiliary to vaccination is one thing ; whether it can be relied on in its stead is quite another thing. Even admitting fully the protective effect of vaccination, it does not, in our opinion, diminish the importance of measures of isolation or dis- pense with their necessity. We think that steps should be taken to secure a more general provision for the isolation of small-pox patients than exists at present. We have already called attention to the fact that mischievous results are likely to follow the use as a small-pox hospital of a building situate in 4 populous place. We think that wherever it is placed it should have sufficient space around it to enable the sanitary authority to add rapidly to the accommodation by the erection of tem- porary buildings. Compulsory Provision of Isolation Hospitals. Sanitary authorities are now sometimes reluctant to provide isolation hospitals. We think that, on a petition by a prescribed number of the ratepayers in a sanitary district, the Local Government Board, if satisfied that the hospital accommodation ought to be provided, should have power to make an Order for such provision. Compulsory Notification of Small-pox. We think that notification of small-pox should everywhere be compul- sory, and, whenever the disease showed a tendency to become epidemic, a notice should be served by the sanitary authority upon all persons in the neighbourhood who would be likely to come within the reach of con- tagion, urging them to submit to vaccination or re-vaccination, as the case might be, if they had not been recently successfully vaccinated or re- vaccinated ; and attention should be called to the facilities afforded for their doing so. Attention should also be called to the importance of avoiding contact with persons suffering from the disease, or coming into proximity to them, and of avoiding contact with any person or thing which may have become infected. It is important to notice that, even where vaccination has been neglected, there is great readiness to submit to it in the presence of a threatened epidemic ; a large number of vacci- nations are then obtained willingly and without opposition. Whenever 698 SUPPLEMENTARY APPENDIX. a sanitary authority has received notification of a case of small-pox, we think the fact should be at once communicated to the vaccination authority of the district in which the case of the disease has occurred. Regulations as to Tramps, Inmates of Lodging-houses, ete. Our attention has been drawn to the circumstance that outbreaks of small-pox have not unfrequently had their origin in the introduction of the disease to common lodging-houses by tramps wandering from place to place. In view of this we make the following recommendations :— (i.) That common shelters which are not now subject to the law relating to common lodging-houses should be made subject. to such law. (ii.) That there should be ‘power to the local authority to require . medical examination of all persons entering common lodging- houses and casual wards to see if they are suffering from small-pox, and to offer a reward for prompt information of the presence of the disease. (iii.) That the local authority should have power to order the keeper of a common lodging-house in which there has been small- pox to refuse fresh admissions for such time as may be required by the authority. (iv.) That the local authority should be empowered to require the temporary closing of any common lodging-house in which small-pox has occurred. (v.) That the local authority should have power to offer free’ lodgings to any inmate of a common lodging-house or casual ward who may reasonably be suspected of being liable to convey small-pox. (vi.) That the sanitary authority should give notice to all adjoining sanitary authorities of the occurrence of small-pox in common lodging-houses or casual wards. (vii.) That where the disease occurs, the Public Vaccinator or the Medical Officer of Health should attend and vaccinate the inmates of such lodging-houses or wards, except such as should be unwilling to submit themselves to the operation. Relaxation of the Vaccination Law. After careful consideration and much study of the subject, we have arrived at the conclusion that it would conduce to increased vaccination if a scheme could be devised which would preclude the attempt (so often a vain one) to compel those who are honestly opposed to the practice to submit their children to vaccination, and, at the same time, leave the law ‘to operate, as at present, to prevent children remaining unvaccinated owing to the neglect or indifference of the parent. When we speak of an honest opposition to the practice, we intend to confine our remarks to cases in which the objection is to the operation itself, and to exclude REPORT OF THE ROYAL VACCINATION COMMISSION. 699 cases in which the objection arises merely from an indisposition to incur the trouble involved. We do not think such a scheme impossible. ‘i Tt must of course be a necessary condition of a scheme of this escription that it should be such as would prevent an objection to the practice being alleged merely as an excuse to save the trouble connected. with the vaccination of the child. We may give the following as examples of the methods which might be adopted. It might be provided that if a parent attended before the local authority and satisfied them that he entertained such an objection, no proceedings should be taken against him. Or, again, a statutory declaration to that effect before any one now authorised to take such declaration, or some other specified official or officials, might be made a bar to proceedings. We do not think it would be any real gain to parents who had no conviction that the vaccination of their children was calculated to do mischief, to take either of these steps rather than submit them to the operation. It is in England that the point we have been recently discussing is of most practical importance, but if our suggestion were adopted the change should, of course, be made in all parts of the United Kingdom. (Signed) HERSCHELL. JAMES PAGET. CHARLES DALRYMPLE. W. GUYER HUNTER. EDWIN H. GALSWORTHY. JOHN 8. DUGDALE. M. FOSTER. JONATHAN HUTCHINSON. FREDERICK MEADOWS WHITE. SAM. WHITBREAD. JOHN A. BRIGHT. Bret Incr, August 1896. Secretary. The undersigned do not find themselves able to go so far in recom- mending relaxation of the law as is implied. We think that in all cases. in which a parent or guardian refuses to allow vaccination, the person so- refusing should be summoned before a magistrate, as at present, and that the only change made should be to permit the magistrate to accept a sworn deposition of conscientious objection, and to abstain from the infliction of a fine. ' We are also of opinion that, in spite of the difficulties as set forth in paragraph 533,* a second vaccination at the age of twelve ought to be made compulsory. W. GUYER HUNTER. JONATHAN HUTCHINSON. * Of the Final Report. 700 SUPPLEMENTARY APPENDIX. ‘We the undersigned desire to express our dissent from the proposal to retain in any form compulsory vaccination. We cordially concur in the recommendation that conscientious ob- jection to vaccination should be respected. The objection that mere negligence or unwillingness on the part of parents to take trouble might keep many children from being vaccinated would be largely, if not wholly, removed by the adoption of the Scotch system of offering vaccination at the home of the child, and by providing for medical treatment of any untoward results which may arise. 4 We therefore think that the modified form of compulsion recommended by our colleagues is unnecessary, and that in practice it could not be carried out. The hostility which compulsion has evoked in the past toward the practice of vaccination is fully acknowledged in the Report. In our opinion the retention of compulsion in any form will in the future cause irritation and hostility of the same kind. The right: of the parent on grounds of conscience to refuse vaccination for his child being conceded, and the offer of vaccination under improved conditions being made at the home of the child, it would in our opinion be best to leave the parent free to accept or reject this offer. SAM. WHITBREAD. JOHN A. BRIGHT, W. J. COLLINS. J. ALLANSON PICTON. Note.—Dr. Collins and Mr. Picton sign the abure note of reservation, though they have not signed the Report, A statement of their grounds of dissent from the Report will be found in the form of an Appendie (65 pages) to the Report. They make the following recommendations :— In accordance with the sub-head No. 2 of the reference to the Commission, we would suggest the following as the means other than vaccination which should be employed for protection of a community from small-pox :— 1. Prompt notification of any illness suspected to be small-pox. Improved instruction in the diagnosis of small-pox. 2. A hospital, suitably isolated, of adequate accommodation, in per- manent readiness, and capable of extension if required. No other disease to be treated at the same time in the same place. 3. A vigilant sanitary staff ready to: deal promptly with first cases, and if necessary to make a house-to-house inspection. The medical officer of health to receive such remuneration as to render him independent of private practice. 4. Prompt removal to hospital by special ambulance of all cases which cannot be properly isolated at home. Telephonic com- munication between Health Office and hospital. REPORT OF THE ROYAL VACCINATION COMMISSION, 701 5. Destruction of infected clothing and bedding, and thorough dis- infection of room or house immediately after removal of the patient. : . Daily observation (including, where possible, taking the tempera- ture and inspection for rash) of all persons who have been in close contact with the patient during his illness ; such super- vision to be carried out either in quarantine stations (away from the hospital) or at their own homes. . Closure of schools on the occasion of the occurrence of small-pox among the scholars or teachers. 8. Hospitals and quarantine stations to be comfortable and attractive, and so administered as to secure the confidence of the public. Hospital treatment to be free to all classes, and compensation to be paid to those detained or otherwise inconvenienced in the public interest, at the public expense. 9. Tramps entering casual wards to be medically inspected, their clothing to be disinfected, and bath provided. The measures for detection and isolation of small-pox in common lodging- houses suggested in section 507 of the Report to be carried out. 10. International notification of the presence of small-pox, and special vigilance at seaports in communication with infected places, after the plan adopted in the case of cholera. 11. Attention to general sanitation—prevention of overcrowding. abundant water supply, and frequent removal of refuse. a 4 They conclude as follows :— We believe the methods of isolation of the infected, disinfection, and the observance of strict cleanliness, are both more successful and more legitimate methods for the State to encourage. They have the advantage of applying the preventive only where it is required ; and they do not necessitate an operation upon the person of every healthy individual. We therefore recommend that the law be amended by the repeal of the compulsory clauses of the Vaccination Acts. But in consideration of the prevalent belief in the value of vaccination as a prophylactic for an indefinite period, we suggest that in other respects the law should be left as it is, subject, however, to such modifications as are recommended for the diminution of attendant risks. The precedent established in the case of the abolition of compulsory church rates might be followed with advantage. In that case all machinery for laying and collecting the rate was left intact though the power of enforcement was taken away. The effect of our recommendation, if adopted, would be that vaccination would continue to be provided as at present for those who desire to avail themselves of it, but efforts to secure vaccination would be limited to moral influence—in a word, the whole country would be in the position of those unions in which the guardians have abandoned compulsion. 55 of The grounds on which we object to the enforcement of vaccination by penalties necessarily lead us to object to any method of indirect 702 SUPPLEMENTARY APPENDIX. compulsion. We regard as both inexpedient and unjust exclusion from any branch of the public service because of the refusal to submit to vaccination or re-vaccination. The injustice is perhaps most severely felt in the case of candidates for employment as pupil-teachers in public elementary schools. There are now districts in which, owing to the general opposition to vaccination, scarcely a girl or boy can be found who is legally eligible, and candidates have to be brought in at great incon- venience from surrounding districts. The existence of an exceptional case ov cases in which such rejected candidates have at some time after- wards taken small-pox is in our view no justification for the continuation of this grievance. Statistics furnished to the Commission prove that large numbers of vaccinated or re-vaccinated persons have taken the disease ; and we are not aware of any evidence to show that vaccinated pupil-teachers have any special immunity. If our recommendations were carried out, the danger of contagion would be greatly diminished in schools, as elsewhere. On the whole, then, while there is much in the report of our colleagues from which we dissent, and we have accordingly abstained with reluctance from adding our signatures to theirs, we are at one with them in holding that it is unwise to attempt to enforce vaccination on those who regard it as useless and dangerous. We, however, go further, and agree with our colleagues, Mr. Whitbread and Mr. Bright, that it would be simpler and more logical to abolish compulsory vaccination altogether. INDEX. 703 INDEX. A Abbé’s condenser, 74 Aberration, chromatic, 67 spherical, 67 Abscess, 173 Achorion Schonleinii, 584 Actinomycosis, 413—447 bovis, 434 — cattle to cattle, 444 cultivation of, 436 hominis, 431 —— in cattle, 429 —— in man, 426 ——- transmission of, from man to lower animals, 443 Agar-agar, 625 Air, compressed, 24 —— examination of, 140 — Hesse’s method, 141 — Koch’s >» Al — Petri’s » 142 —— Pouchet’s ,, 143 --— Sedgwick’s ,, 143 Aitken’s tubes, 129, 630 Alexines, 57 Alum carmine, 616 Ameeba coli, 610 Anaerobes, classified, 494 cultivation of, 130—133 Aniline water, 617 Animals Order, 1878, 455 Anthrax, 42, 183, 191—216 —— bacillus of, 192, 197 —-— in horses, 207 —— in swine, 203 origin and spread of, 198 —— preventive inoculation, 209 _— »» Measures in, 199 ; Anthrax, stamping-out system, 210 Antiseptics, 30 Antitoxins, 56, 57 —— diphtheria, 58—62 —— septic infections, 63 —— tetanus, 62 —— typhoid, 64 Arthrospores, 19 Artificial fluids as media, 120 Ascococcus, 14 --— Billrothii, 498 — citreus, 498 Ascomycetes, 584 Asiatic cholera, 360 Aspergillus albus, 588 —— clavatus, 588 —— flavescens, 588 —— flavus, 586 —— fumigatus, 586 —— glaucus, 586 -—— nidulans, 588 —— niger, 587 —— ochraceus, 588 —— repens, 586 — subfuscus, 588 B Babés’ incubator, 633 Bacillus, 13, 488 —~— acidiformans, 498 —— acidi lactici, 498 —— aerogenes, 499 capsulatus, 499 ——- aerophilus, 499 —— albus, 499 —— —— anaerobiescens, 499 —— — cadaveris, 499 —— —— putidus, 499 5 45 706 Bacillus allantoides, 499 ---~ allii, 499 —— alvei, 470 —-- amylobacter, 502 —— amylozyma, 500 —— anaerobicus liquefaciens, 500 —— anthracis, 192 —— aquatilis, 500 — -—— fluorescens, 500 —— graveolens, 500 —— sulcatus, 500 arborescens, 500 — argenteo-liquefaciens, 501 — phosphorescens, 401 aurantiacus, 501 aureus, 501 beroliniensis indicus, 502 —— brassice, 502 —— brevis, 502 ——- brunneus, 502 ——- buccalis fortuitus, 502 — —— maximus, 502 minutus, 502° —- butyricus, 502, 503 «- -—— cadaveris, 503 : —— canalis capsulatus, 504 —— —— parvus, 504 —— candicans, 504 —— capsulatus, 504 .— —— mucosus, 504 suis, 504 -——— carabiformis, 504 —-— carnicolor, 504 --— carotarum, 505 —— cavicida, 505 ——- chromo-aromaticus, 505 SS Havaniensis, 505 -—— circulans, 505 -— citreus cadaveris, 505 —— cloace, 505 —— coeruleus, 505 —— coli communis, 344 —— -— similis, 506 —— constrictus, 506 | —— coprogenes foetidus, 506 | —— —— parvus, 506 ih | ‘. * iy crassus aromaticus, 506 —— sputigenus, 506 cuniculicida, 228 cuticularis, 506 --~ albus, 506 la | 7 cyaneo-fuscus, 507 Bacillus cyaneo-phosphorescens, 507 —— cyanogenus, 507, 508 — cystiformis, 508 —— delicatulus, 508 —— dentalis viridans, 508 —— dentriticus, 508 — devorans, 508 —— diffusus, 508 —— diphtheriz, 332—336 columbarum, 336 —-— —— vitulorum, 509 —— dysodes, 509 ~ --— endocarditidis capsulatus, 509 | ——- —— griseus, 509 —- enteritidis, 372 | —— epidermidis, 509 —— erysipelatis suis, 356 erythrosporus, 509 —— figurans, 510, 511 — filiformis, 511 Havaniensis, 511 —— flavescens, 511 — flavocoriaceus, 511 —— fluorescens aureus, 511 —— —— liquefaciens, 511 —— -— longus, 512 — —— minutissimus, 512 — — —- nivalis, 512 —— —— non-liquefaciens, 512 —— —— putidus, 512 ———~ —- tenuis, 512 —— feetidus, 513 ‘ozene, 513 —— fulvus, 513 -_— fuscus, 513 limbatus, 513 —— gallinarum, 513 —— gasoformans, 513 —— glaucus, 513 —— gliscrogenus, 513 —— gracilis, 514 — granulosus, 514 -—— graveolens, 514 — guttatus, 514 —— hemorrhagic septicemia, 231 —— halophilus, 514 : — Hansenii, 514 —— Havaniensis, 505 —— —— liquefaciens, 514 -—— helvolus, 515 —— heminecrobiophilus, 515 —— hepaticus fortuitus, 515 ! INDEX, Bacillus Hessii, 515 —-— hyacinthi septicus, 515 ——— hyalinus, 515 —— hydrophilus fuscus, 515 —— ianthinus, 516 —— implexus, 516 —— in acne contagiosa in horses, 516 —— in cancer, 516 —— incanus, 518 -—— in cholera in ducks, 516 ——-- in choleraic diarrhcea, 516 ~-— indicus, 518 —— indigogenus, 519 -—- in diphtheritic disease of calves 516 —-- in erythema nodosum, 517 —— in infectious disease of bees, 471 inflatus, 519 in fc wl enteritis, 230 —— in gangrene, 517 —— in grouse disease, 517 —— in hog cholera, 517 —— in infantile diarrhoea, 517 -—— in intestinal diphtheriain rabbits, 517 —— in jequirity infusion, 517 in measles, 517 in noma, 517 —— in potato rot, 517 —— in purpura hemorrhagica, 517 in putrid bronchitis, 518 —— in “red-cod,” 518 ——— in rhinoscleroma, 518 — — in saliva, 518 -.—— in swine fever, 346-352 —— —— erysipelas, 354 ——- —— measles, 354 inunctus, 519 invisibilis, 518 — in whooping cough, 518 — iridescens, 519 — iris, 519 —- lactericeus, 520 — lactis aerogenes, 519 albus, 520° = erythrogenes, 520 — — pituitosi, 520 —— leporis lethalis, 520 —— leprx, 407 —— leptosporus, 520 _—— limbatus acidi lactici, 520 ——— limosus, 520 7 707 Bacillus liodermos, 521 —— liquefaciens, 521 —— —— communis, 521 —— -—— magnus, 521 —— —— parvus, 521 —— liquidus, 521 _—— litoralis, 521 —— lividus, 524 —— luteus, 524 -—— maidis, 524 —— mallei, 452 —— megatherium, 524 —— membranaceus amethystinus, 525 —— meningitidis purulente, 525 —— mesentericus fuscus, 525 -——— —— ruber, 525 —— —— vuilgatus, 526 —— multipediculus, 522 —— muscoides, 522 —— mycoides, 522 —— —— roseus, 522 ~—— neapolitanus, 522 —— necrophorus, 523 — nitrificans, 523 nodosus parvus, 523 nubilus, 523 — ochraceus, 523 — cedematis aerobicus, 523 —— —— maligni, 220 —— of Belfanti and Pascarola, 523 — of Colomiatti, 526 —— of Fulles, 526 -~— of Guillebeau, 526 ——- of Letzerich, 526 — of Martinez, 526 —— of Nocard, 526 — of Okada, 526 —— of quarter-evil, 217 —— of Roth, 526 —— of Sattler, 526 —— of Schaffer, 527 —— of Scheurlen, 527 —— of Schou, 527 of septicemia of buffaloes, 226 —— of guinea-pigs,224 — -~—— —— of mice, 225 —— of swine plague, 351 — of Tommasoli, 527 —— of Utpadel, 527 —— of Winogradsky, 527 —— ophthalmia, 190 —— ovatus minutissimus, 527 708 Bacillus oxytocus perniciosus, 527 — pestifer, 528 —— phosphorescens gelidus, 528 —— —— indicus, 528 —— —— indigenus, 528 —— plicatus, 528 —— pneumonie croupose, 233 —— pneumosepticus, 528 —— polypiformis, 528 prodigiosus, 528 —— proteus fluorescens, 529 —— pseudo-diphtheriticus, 529 —— —— tuberculosis, 529 --— pulp pyogenes, 529 ---— punctatus, 529 — putrificus coli, 529: —— pyocyaneus, 529 -— pyogenes foetidus, 530 soli, 530 radiatus, 530 —— —— aquatilis, 530 —— ramosus, 531 —— reticularis, 531 —— rhinoscleroma, 411 — rosaceus metalloides, 531 —-— rubefaciens, 531 —— rubellus, 531 —— ruber, 531 —--~ rubescens, 532 ~— rubidus, 5382 ‘ —— sanguinis typhi, 532 —— saprogenes, 532 —— scissus, 532 —— septicemiz hemorrhagice, 231 —— septicus, 532 —— —- acuminatus, 533 —— —— agrigenus, 533 —— -—— keratomolacie, 533 — — ulceris gangreenosi, 533 —— —— vesice, 533 ——- sessilis, 533. ——— smaragdino-phosphoreseens, 533 -—— smaragdinus foetidus, 534 —— solidus, 534 —— spiniferus, 534 ——- spinosus, 534 —-— stolonatus, 534 —— stoloniferus, 534 striatus albus, 534 —— —— flavus, 534 —— subflavus, 535 ——- subtilis, 535 , INDEX. Bacilius subtilis similans, 536 —— sulfureus, 536 —— superficialis, 537 -~---- syphilis, 410 —— tenuis sputigenus, 537 —— termo, 537 —-- tetani, 457 -—— thelassophilus, 537 —— thermophilus, 537 —— tremelloides, 537 —— tuberculosis, 378 gallinarum, 402 ——— tumescens, 537 -—- typhi abdominalis, 342—346 — -— murium, 359 -— ubiquitus, 537 » —— ulna, 538 vacuolosis, 538 —— varicosus conjunctive, 538 ——- venenosus, 538 brevis, 538 — —— invisibilis, 538 —— —— liquefaciens, 539 —— ventriculi, 539 —— vermicularis, 539 vermiculosus, 539 ——- violaceus, 539 —— —— laurentius, 539 © virescens, 539 —— viridis pallescens, 539 —— viscosus, 540 —- Zurnianus, 540 Bacteriacez, 480 Bacteria, chemical action on, 25 products of, 39 — composition of, 11 distribution of, 29 form of, 13 growth of, 23, 25 —— in cattle plague, 296 in diphtheria of pigeons, 336 —— in distemper, 358 —— in foot and mouth disease, 300 —— in horse-pox, 312 —— in liquids, 83 — in louping-ill, 463 —— in measles, 283 in pus, 176 —— in rabies, 460 — in scarlet fever, 262 —— in sheep-pox, 298 —— in small-pox, 285 INDEX. Bacteria in vaccine lymph, 324—826 -—— in yellow fever, 260 —— microscopic examination of, 83 —— nitrifying, 27 —— pathogenic, 27 -~— saprogenic, 26 stained, 85 -— unstained, 84 ' Bacterium aerogenes, 540 — brunneum, 540 | ——- fusiforme, 540 | —— gingivee pyogenes, 540 — hyacinthi, 540 —— hydrosulfureum ponticum, 540 —— litoreum, 540 — luteum, 540 —— merismopedioides, 541 navicula, 541 —— photometricum, 541 —— synxanthum, 541 —-— termo, 541 —**holeideum, 541 urex, 541 -—— violaceum, 541 -— Zopfii, 542 Beggiatoa alba, 542 roseo-persicina, 542 Bibliography, 639 Bilious fever, 183 Biondi’s stain, 615 Bismarck-browa, 617 Blepharadenitis, 184 Blood-serum, 113, 114, 119 Borax carmine, 617 Botrytis Bassiana, 588 Bread paste, 118 Broncho-pneumonia, 183 Broth, 118 Bunge’s method of staining flagella, 92 C Camera lucida, 621 Cancer bodies, 610 Caoutchouc caps, 626 Caterpillars, disease of, 492 Cattle plague, 293—296 —— tuberculosis of, 389 Cerebro-spinal meningitis, 184 Chemical action on bacteria, 25 __— disinfectants, 32—36 __— products of bacteria, 39 709 Chemiotaxis, 54 Chionyphe Carteri, 588 Cholera, 360 —— bacteria of, 371 —— comma bacilli of, 361—367 —— diarrheea from meat-poisoning. 371 —— diarrheea in fowls, 373 —— nostras, 370 —— protective inoculation, 369 —— Ptomaines, 41 —— spirillum of, 361 Chromogenic bacteria, 25 Cladothricez, 480 Cladothrix, 479 —— dichotoma, 543 —— Forsteri, 544 — intricata, 544 —— invulnerabilis, 544 Classification, 475, 487, 482, 481 Clostridium butyricum, 5 — feetidum, 545 Coccacere, 480 Cocci, 485 Coccidia, 609 Comma bacilli, 361—367 Cover-glass preparations, 86 Cow-pox, 274—282, 312—324, 326— 328 Crenothrix Kiihniana, 545 D Dacryocystis, 184 Damp chambers, 628 D’Arsonval’s incubator, 631 Davaine's septicemia, 228 De Bary’s classification, 481 Decalcifying, 93, 615 Defensive proteids, 57 Deneke’s comma bacillus, 367 Desiccators, 638 Diarrhea, choleraic, 371 Diphtheria, 330, 182 ——- antitoxin in, 55—62 -— bacillus of, 332 —— in milk, 338 —— in pigeons, 336 —— Lifiler’s stain for, 88 —— Ptomaines of, 46 Diplococeus, 14 —— albicans amplus, 547 ___.. —— tardissimus, 547 710 Diplococcus 547 citreus conglomeratus, liquefaciens, 547 —— coryze, 547 —— flavus liquefaciens tardus, 547 —— fluorescens foetidus, 547 -—- intercellularis meningitidis, 548 —- luteus, 548 —— pneumoniz, 233—238 -—— -—— of horses, 548 —-— roseus, 548 ~—— subflavus, 548 Distemper in dogs, 358 Drop-cultures, 120 Duck cholera, 230 Dysentery, 373 E Ebner’s solution, 615 Egyptian ophthalmia, 190 Ebrlich’s staining method, 89 Electricity, 24, 127 Embedding, 93, 615 Empusa muscz, 581 —— radicans, 582 Endospores, 18 Enteric, 41, 340 Enzymes, 48 Eosin, 89,617 Epidemic disease of deer and boars, 227 —— —— of ferrets, 358 —— —— of mice, 358 Erysipelas, 185—189 Esmarch’s roll-cultures, 113 Experiments on animals, 134, 394 F Farrant’s solution, 621 Favus, 584 Filter, hot water, 624 Flacherie, 472 Flagella, i7, 90 Fliigge’s classification, 481 Foot rot, 464 Form of bacteria, 13 Foul-brood, 469 Fowl cholera, 228 -—- enteritis, 230 — scab, 586 Friedlinder’s bacillus, 233 Fuchsine, 617 INDEX. G Gangrene, 182 Gas chamber, 127 Gases produced by bacteria, 24 Gentian violet stain, 617 Giant cells, 376 Gibbes’ solution, 618 Glanders, 451 — bacillus of, 452 —— mallein in, 454 —— ptomaine, 48 Glycerine agar, 104 Glycerine gelatine, 615 Gonococcus of Neisser, 189 Gonorrheea, 189 Gram’s method, 88, 89, 97, 618 Grease, 303 Grouse disease, 230 H Hematococcus bovis, 548 Hematomonas carassii, 605 ——- cobitis, 603 Hematoxylin, 618 Hamatozoa, 589, 593, 599, 603 Hardening, 93, 615 Helicobacterium aerogenes, 549 Herpetomonas Lewisi, 599 Hessert’s stain, 92 Historical introduction, 1 Horse-pox, 303, 312 Hot air and steam, 36, 623 Hot water filter, 624 Hueppe’s classification, 482 —— inspissator, 630 Hydrophobia, 459 Hyphomycetes, 581 Hypodermii, 581 I Tllumination, 75 Immersion system, 69 Immunity, 50—57 Impression preparations, 92 Incubators, 631 Infectious pleuro-pneumonia, 239, 247 , Influenza, 247—249 Tnspissators, 629 Involution forms, 15 Iodine, 618 Isolation of micro-organisms, 139 Israel’s case, 628 K Klein’s micrococcus of pneumonia, 238 Kleinenberg’s solution, 616 Koch’s comma bacillus, 361 —— postulates, 9 —— serum steriliser, 629 — steam steriliser, 622 L Leprosy, 406 -—— bacillus of, 407 —— stamping out system, 409 Leptothrix, 480 — buccalis, 549 — gigantea, 549 Leuconostoc, 549 Leukemia, 184 Light, effect of, on bacteria, 24 Lister’s flasks, 128, 630 Lithium carmine solution, 618 Loffler’s solution, 619 —— stain, 88, 90 Louping ill, 462 bacillus of, 463 Lutesch’s stain, 91 M Madura diséase, 447 _ Magenta solution, 618 Malaria, 589 Malignant cedema, 220 Mallein, 454 Measles, bacteria in, 183, 283 Media, 99 Merismopedia, 14 Methyl violet, 619 Methylene blue, 618, 619 Micrococcus acidi lactici, 550 —— —— —— liquefaciens, 550 —— aerogenes, 551 —— agilis, 551 —_+ + eitreus, 551 —~— albus liquefaciens, 551 —— amylivorus, 551 —— aquatilis, 551 —— —-— invisibilis, 551 —— auranticaus, 551 —- botyogenus, 552 -—— candicans, 552 — candidus, 552 carneus, 552 cerasinus siccus, 552 INDEX. Micrococcus cereus albus, 178 —— — flavus, 178 -—— cinnabareus, 552 —— citreus, 552 —— concentricus, 553 —— cremoides, 553 —— crepusculum, 553 -——— cumulatus tenuis, 553 —— endocarditidis rugatus, 553 —— fervidosus, 553 —-— Finlayensis, 553 -——- flavus desideus, 553 —— —— liquefaciens, 554 —— —— tardigradus, 554 —— feetidus, 554 —— Freudenreichi, 554 ——- fuscus, 554 —— gingive pyogenes, 554 —— gonorrhee, 190 —— Havaniensis, 555 —— in abscess in rabbits, 556 — in Biskra button, 555 —— in gangrenous mastitis in sheep, 555 —— in infectious pleuro-pneumonia, 555 —-— in influenza, 555 —— in pemphigus, 555-6 —-— in pneumonia, 236, 238, 556° —— in pyzmia in rabbits, 556 -— in septicemia in rabbits, 556 —— in syphilis, 557 —— in trachoma, 190 — lactis viscosus, 557 _ —— luteus, 557 —— melitensis (Malta fever), 557 —— ochroleucus, 557 ——— plumosus, 557 —-— pneumoniz croupose, 236 —— pyogenes tenuis, 557 : — rosaceus, 558 --—— rosettaceus, 558 —— salivarus septicus, 558 —- stellatus, 588 —— tetragenus, 558 —— —— mobilis ventriculi, 558 --- —— subflavus, 558 —— —— versatilis, 558 — urez liquefaciens, 559 ——— versicolor, 559 -—— violaceus, 559 —— viticulosus, 559 711 712 Micrometer, 80 Microscope, 65, 612 ~ Microsporon furfur, 586 Microtomes, 94,614 Miescher’s tubes, 609 Mildew, 581 Milk, 120 —— scarlatina, 265, 282 —— tubercular, 291 Miquel’s bulbs, 129 Moist chambers and cells, 121 Moitessier’s gas regulator, 634 Monads, 601 Monas Okenii, 560 —— Vinosa, 560 —— Warmingii, 560 Mouse favus, 586 Movements of bacteria, 15, 24 Mucors, 583 Miiller’s fluid, 616 Myconostoc gregarium, 560 Myco-protein, 11 N Nature of soil for bacteria, 23 Neelsen’s solution, 89, 98, 619 Nicols’ stain, 92 Nitromonas of Winogradsky, 560 Nutrient agar, 103 Nutrient gelatine, 100 ie) Oidium albicans, 586 — lactis, 584 —— Tuckeri, 584 Oil immersion, 70 Orseille, 619 P Parietti’s method, 148 Pasteur’s apparatus, 130 Pathogenic bacteria, 27 Pébrine, 471 Pediococcus acidi lactici, 560 cerevisize, 560 Penicillium glaucum, 588 Peronospora infestans, 582 Petri’s method exam. of air, 142 Pfeiffer bodies, 610 Phagocytosis, 27, 55 Photogenic bacteria, 25 Photography of bacteria, 150, 168 INDEX. Photo-micrographic apparatus, 621. Phycomycetes, 582 Phylaxins, 57 Picrie acid, 619 Picro-carmine, 619 Picro-lithium carmine, 620 Pilobolus, 583 Plague, bacillus of, 250, 252 Plate cultivations, 106 Platinum needles, 83, 616 Pleuro-pneumonia, 239 Pneumobacillus liquefaciens 242, 560 Pneumonia, 233—238 —— ptomaines, 48 Potash solution, 620 . Potato medium, 115—117 Pouchet’s aeroscope, 143 Preservation of preparations, 93° Protective inoculation, 49 —— —— in anthrax, 209 in cholera, 369 —— —— in rabies, 460 —— —— in sheep-pox, 298 —— —— in small-pox, 285, 293 —— in swine erysipelas, 336- Proteus capsulatus septicus, 560 hominis capsulatus, 224 —— in gangrene of the lung, 560 — wmicrosepticus, 560 —— mirabilis, 561 —— septicus, 561 —— sulfureus, 561 —- vulgaris, 561 —— Zenkeri, 562 Pseudo-diphtheritic bacillus, 335 Pseudo-diplococcus pneumoniz, 562: Psorosperms, 609 Ptomaines, 39 Pus, bacteria in, 176 Putrefactive bacteria, 26, 28 Pyemia, 175 Q Quarter-evil, 217 R Rabies, 459—462 Rag-pickers’ septicaemia, 224 Refraction, 65 Relapsing fever, ‘257 Reproduction, 18 bovis,, INDEX, Respiration of bacteria, 22 Rhabdomonas rosea, 562 BRhinoscleroma, 411 Ringworm, 585 8 Saccharomyces acidi lactici, 580 — albicans, 579 —— anomalus, 579 —— apiculatus, 578 —— aquifolii, 580 —— cerevisiz, 577 —— conglomeratus, 578 —— ellipsoideus, 577 —— exiguus, 578 —— glutinus, 579 —— Hansenii, 580 -—— ilicis, 580 — Jorgensenii, 578 —— Ludwigii, 580 -—— Marxianus, 580 —— membranefaciens, 580 —— minar, 580 niger, 580 —— pastorianus, 578 -— pyriformis, 579 rosaceus, 580 sphericus, 579 Safranine, 620 Sapremia, 175 Saprogenic bacteria, 26 Saprolegina, 582 Saprophytic bacteria, 27 Sarcinz, 487 Sarcina alba, 562 —— aurantiaca, 562 -—— candida, 563 ——~ flava, 563 —— hyalina, 563 —— intestinalis, 563 --— litoralis, 563 ——- lutea, 563 -—- mobilis, 563 —— pulmonum, 563 —-~ Reitenbachii, 564 rosea, 564 — urine, 564 —- ventriculi, 564 Scarlet fever, 261 Schizomycetes, 477 Schlosing’s membrane regulator, 632 Sclavo’s stain, 91 Septiczemia, 175 —— of calves, 227 —— of Davaine, 224 —— of guinea-pigs, 224 —— of mice, 225 —-— of rabbits, 228 —— of rag-pickers, 224 Serum therapy, 56 Sheep-pox, 297 Small-pox, 182, 284-293, 326 Smut, 581 Soil, examination of, 144 Sozins, 57 Spherotilus natans, 564 Spirilla, 495 Spirillum amyliferum, 564 —— anserum, 564 —— attenuatum, 564 ———— aureum, 564 — cholere Asiaticz, 361 —— choleroides, 565 — concentricum, 565 —— dentium, 565 —— Finkler and Prior, 258. - — flavescens, 565 — — flavum, 565 — Giinther, 566 — leucomelaneum, 565. —— lingue, 565 — marinum, 565 —— Metchnikovi, 373 —— Miller, 566 —— nasale, 566 —— Neisser, 566 —— Obermeieri, 258 —— plicatile, 466 —— Renon, 566 —— rosaceum, 566 —— Rosenbergii, 566 —— rubrum, 569 —— rufum, 566 —— rugula, 567 —— sanguineum, 567 —— saprophiles, 567 —— serpens, 568 —— Smith, 566 —— sputigenum, 568 —— suis, 568 —— tenue, 568 —— tyrogenum, 568 — undula, 568 — volutans, 568 713: 714 Spirillum Weibel, 566 Spirocheetz, 596 Spiromonas Cohnii, 569 volubilis, 569 Spontaneous generation, 3 Spores, 18 Staining spores, 90 Staphylococcus, 14 —— cereus albus, 178, 324 flavus, 178 —— pyogenes albus, 178 —— —— aureus, 176, 324 —— —— citreus, 178 —— pyosepticus, 569 —— salivarius pyogenes, 569 —— viridis flavescens, 569 ‘Stémberg’s bulbs, 128, 630 ‘Streptococcus, 14 —— acidi lactici, 569 —— albus, 569 -—— bombycis, 472 —— brevis, 569 —— cadaveris, 570 —— coli gracilis, 570 —— conglomeratus, 570 —— flavus desidens, 570 | -—— giganteus urethre, 570 —— Havaniensis, 570 —— in contagious mammitis in cows, 570 571 in strangles, 571 —— liquefaciens, 571 —— mirabilis, 571 -—~— of Bonome, 571 —— of erysipelas, 185, 189 —— of Manneberg, 571 —— perniciosus psittacorum, 572 —— pyogenes, 178-184 radiatus, 572 ——- septicus, 572 liquefaciens, 572 vermiformis, 572 ‘Streptothrix, 496 —— actinomycotica, 431 —— albus, 572 ——- asteroides, 573 —— aurantiaca, 573 carnea, 573 —— chromogena, 573 —- farcinica, 573 in progressive necrosis in mice, - INDEX. Streptothrix Forsteri, 573 -—~ Hoffmanni, 573 — liquefaciens, 573 —— Madure, 449 —— musculorum suis, 573 — odorifera, 573 ——- violacea, 573 Substage condenser, 74 Suppuration, 48 Surgical fever, 182 Surra, 593 Swine erysipelas, 354 ——- fever, 46, 227 —— measles, 364 Syphilis, 183, 410 T Tarichium megaspermum, 582 Temperature for bacteria, 24 Test-tube cultivations, 105 Tetanus, 457 ptomaine, 41 Thermo-regulators, 635 Tilletia caries, 581 Toxalbumins, 39 Trachoma, 412 Trenkmann’s stain, 91 Trichomonas, 607 Tricophyton tonsurans, 585 Tripod levelling apparatus, 627 Tuberculosis, 43, 375 —— and meat, 397 and public health, 391 —— antitoxin, 64 — bacillus of, 378 —— giant cells in, 376 —~- in animals, 389, 394, 399, 400 —— in man, 387 Typhoid, 340 Typhus, 259 U Ulcerative endocarditis, 183 Undulina ranarum, 607 Uredo, 581 Urine as a medium, 120 Urobacillus Duclauxi, 573 Freudenreichi, 574 —— Maddoxi, 574 -—— Pasteuri, 574 —— Schutzenbergi, 574 INDEX. 715 Urocystis occulta, 581 Weigert’s stain, 296 Ustilago carbo, 581 Wort gelatine, 104 v x Van Ermengen’s stain, 91 Xylol, 616 Vegetable infusions as media, 120 Vesuvin, 620 Y Vibrio rugula, 574 Yeasts, 577 Yellow fever, 182, 259 WwW Warmstage, 123, 124 Z Water bath, 624 Zooglea, 13 —— examination of, 145 Zopf’s classification, 480 1896. 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EDWARD T. REICHERT, M.D., Professor of Physiology, University of Penn- sylvania. : HENRY SEWALL, Ph. D., M.D., Professor of Physiology, Medical Depart- ment, University of Denver. EDITED BY WILLIAM H. HOWELL, Ph. D., M.D., Professor of Physiology, Johns Hopkins University. This work is the most notable attempt yet made in. America to com- bine in one volume the entire subject of Human Physiology by well- known teachers who have given especial study to that part of the subject upon which they write. 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The entire book has been thoroughly revised. In addition to this general revision, special paragraphs on the following new matter have been introduced : Filamentous Keratitis, Blood-staining of the Cornea, Essential Phthisis Bulbi, Foreign Bodies in the Lens, Circinate Reti- nitis, Symmetrical Changes at the Macula Lutea in Infancy, Hyaline Bodies in the Papilla, Monocular Diplopia, Subconjunctival Injections of Germicides, Infiltration-Anzesthesia, and Sterilization of Collyria. Brief mention of Ophthalmia Nodosa, Electric Ophthalmia, and Angioid Streaks in the Retina also finds place. An Appendix has been added, containing a full description of the method of determining the corneal astigmatism with the ophthalmometer of Javal and Schiétz, and the rotations of the eyes with the tropometer of Stevens. The chapter on Operations has been enlarged and rewritten. A TEXT-BOOK OF HISTOLOGY, DESCRIPTIVE AND PRACTICAL. With 174 beautifully colored original figures. By Artuur Ciarkson, M. B., C.M., Edin., formerly Demon- strator of Physiology in the Owen’s College, Manchester ; late Demonstrator of Physiology in Yorkshire College, Leeds. Fur- nishing the student in one volume with all that is necessary for his equipment as an Histologist. Large 8vo. volume, strongly bound. Price, $6.00 net. The purpose of the book is to furnish the student of Histology, in one volume, with both the descriptive and the practical part of the science. In each chapter the structures of the various tissues and organs are first described ; the student is then taken tutorially over the illustrative specimens; finally, an appendix concludes each chapter with a short account of the methods of preparation. BULLETIN OF MEDICAL PUBLICATIONS : W. B. SAUNDERS, PHILADA. BOOKS RECENTLY ISSUED. TEXT-BOOK OF THE PATHOGENIC BACTERIA. Specially written for students of medicine. By JosrpH McFar- LAND, M.D., Professor of Pathology and Bacteriology in the Medico-Chirurgical College of Philadelphia, etc. 359 pages, finely illustrated. Cloth. Price, $2.50 net. The book presents a concise account of the technical procedures necessary in the study of Bacteriology. It describes the life-history of pathogenic bacteria, and the pathological lesions following invasions. The illustrations have been gathered from standard sources, and com- prise the best and most complete aggregation extant. “The author has rendered a great service to the profession in bringing out this work at this opportune time.”— Zhe American Therapist, Aug., 1896. PRACTICAL POINTS IN NURSING. For Nurses in Private Practice. By Emity A. M. Sronry, Superintendent of the Training-school for Nurses, Carney Hospital, South Boston. 456 pages, handsomely illustrated with 73 engravings and 9 colored and half-tone plates. 12mo. Cloth. Price, $1.75 net. A vade mecum for the private nurse, and an efficient teaching-book for training-schools. Instructions for quickly zmprovising needed sick- room appliances constitute a valuable feature of the book. The Appendix contains, in compact form, much information that will be of great value to the nurse, including General Rules for Feeding the Sick; Recipes for Invalid Foods and Beverages ; Tables of Weights and Measures; Table for Computing Date of Labor; List of Abbre- viations ; Dose-List; and a Glossary of 64 pages. “The author’s style is most agreeable, and she handles her subject in a way that clearly shows her complete familiarity with it.’—Mew York Polyclinic, Aug. 15, 1896. “There are few books intended for non-professional readers which can be so cor- dially endorsed by a medical journal as can this one.”— Therapeutic Gazette, Aug. 15, 1896. “This is a well-written, eminently practical volume,’—American Fournal of Obstetrics, Aug., 1896. THE PICTORIAL ATLAS OF SKIN DISEASES AND SYPHILITIC AFFECTIONS (American Edition). Translation from the French. Edited by J. J. Prince, M. B., F.R.C. P., Assistant Physician to, and Physician to the depart- ment for Diseases of the Skin at, the Middlesex Hospital, London. Photo-lithochromes from the famous models of dermatological and syphilitic cases in the Museum of the Saint-Louis Hospital, Paris, with explanatory wood-cuts and text. In 12 Parts, at $3.00 per Part. Parts I. to IV. now ready. “The plates are beautifully executed.”— JONATHAN Hurcuinson, M. D. (London Hospital). BULLETIN OF MEDICAL PUBLICATIONS: W. B. SAUNDERS, PHI JUST PUBLISHED. A TEXT-BOOK OF BACTERIOLOGY, including the Eti- ology and Prevention of Infective Diseases and an ac- count of Yeasts and Moulds, Hzmatozoa, and Psoro- sperms. By Epcar M. CrooxsHank, M.B., Professor of Comparative Pathology and Bacteriology, King’s College, London. A handsome octavo volume of 700 pages, illustrated with 273 engravings in the text, and 22 original and colored plates. Price, $6.50 net. This book, though nominally a Fourth Edition of Professor Crook- shank’s ‘‘ ManuaL oF BacTERIOLOGY,’’ is practically a new work, the old one having been reconstructed, greatly enlarged, revised through- out, and largely rewritten, forming a text-book for the Bacteriological Laboratory, for Medical Officers of Health, and for Veterinary In- spectors. A MANUAL OF PHYSIOLOGY, with Practical Exer- cises. For Students and Practitioners. By G. N. STEw- ART, M. A., M.D., D.Sc., lately. Examiner in Physiology, University of Aberdeen, and of the New Museums, Cambridge University ; Professor of Physiology in the Western Reserve University, Cleveland, Ohio. Handsome octavo volume of 800 pages, with 278 illustrations in the text, and 5 colored -plates. Price, Cloth, $3.50 net. In this book formal exposition has been interwoven with practical work, in the manner shown by the experience of the Author to be best suited to the needs and opportunities of the student. The systematic portion of the book is so arranged that it can be used independently of the practical work, and aims at being itself a complete exposition of the subject, adapted to the requirements of the student of medicine. “Tt will make its way by sheer force of merit, and amply deserves to do so. It is one of the very best English text-books on the subject.’—Lancet. “Of the many text-books of physiology published, we do not know of one that so nearly comes up to the ideal as does Prof. Stewart’s volume.”—British Medical Journal, WATER AND WATER SUPPLIES. By Joun C. Turesu, D. Sc., M. B., D. P. H., Lecturer on Public Health, King’s Col- lege, London; Editor of the ‘‘ Journal of State Medicine,”’’ etc. r2mo, 438 pages, illustrated. Handsomely bound in Cloth, with gold side and back stamps. Price, $2.25 net. This work will furnish any one interested in public health the infor- mation requisite for forming an opinion as to whether any supply or proposed supply is sufficiently wholesome and abundant, and whether the cost can be considered reasonable. BULLETIN OF MEDICAL PUBLICATIONS: W. B. SAUNDERS, PHILADA. JUST PUBLISHED. A TEXT-BOOK OF MATERIA MEDICA, THERA- PEUTICS, AND PHARMACOLOGY. By Georce F. Butter, Pu. G., M.D., Professor of Materia Medica and of Clinical Medicine in the College of Physicians and Surgeons, Chicago ; Professor of Materia Medica and Therapeutics, North- western University, Woman’s Medical School, etc. 8vo, 858 pages. Illustrated. Prices: Cloth, $4.00 net; Sheep or Half- Morocco, $5.00 net. A clear, concise, and practical text-book, adapted for permanent reference no less than for the requirements of the class-room. The arrangement is believed to be at once the most philosophical and rational, as well as that best calculated to engage the interest of those to whom the academic study of the subject is wont to offer no little perplexity. Special attention has been given to the Pharmaceutical section, which is exceptionally lucid and complete. ESSENTIALS OF PHYSICAL DIAGNOSIS OF THE CHEST. By ArTHuRM. Corwin, A. M., M. D., Demonstrator of Physical Diagnosis in the Rush Medical College, Chicago ; Attending Physician to the Central Free Dispensary, Department of Rhinology, Laryngology, and Diseases of the Chest. 200 pages. Illustrated. Cloth, flexible covers. Price, $1.25 net. ARCHIVES OF CLINICAL SKIAGRAPHY. By SypNEy Rowanp, B.A., Camb., Late Scholar of Downing College, Cambridge, and Shuter Scholar of St. Bartholomew’s Hospital, London; Special Commissioner to ‘British Medical Journal” for the Investigation of the Applications of the New Photography to Medicine and Surgery. A series of collotype illustrations, with descriptive text, illustrating the applications of the New Photography to Medicine and Surgery. Price, per Part, $1.00. Parts I. and II. now ready. FORTHCOMING PUBLICATIONS. SURGICAL DIAGNOSIS AND TREATMENT. By J. W. MacDonatp, M. D., Graduate of Medicine of the University of Edinburgh ; Licentiate of the Royal College of Surgeons of Edinburgh ; Professor of the Practice of Surgery and of Clinical Surgery in Minneapolis College of Physicians and Surgeons ; Surgeon to Wisconsin Central Railway, etc. TEXT-BOOK OF EMBRYOLOGY. By Joun C. HEISLER, M. D., Prosector to the Professor of Anatomy, Medical Depart- ment of the University of Pennsylvania. BULLETIN OF MEDICAL PUBLICATIONS: WwW. Now Ready, Volume for 1896. - SAUNDERS’ American Year-Book of Medicine and Surgery COLLECTED AND ARRANGED BY EMINENT AMERICAN SPECIALISTS AND TEACHERS, UNDER THE EDITORIAL CHARGE OF GEORGE M. GOULD, M.D. Norwitustanpine the rapid multiplication of medical and surgical works, still these publications fail to meet fully the requirements of the general physician, inasmuch as he feels the need of something more than mere text-books of well- known principles of medical science. Mr. Saunders has long been impressed with this fact, which is confirmed by the unanimity of expression from the profession at large, as indicated by advices from his large corps of canvassers. This deficiency would best be met by current. journalistic literature, but most practitioners have scant access to this almost unlimited source of informa- tion, and the busy practiser has but little time to search out in periodicals the many interesting cases, whose study would doubtless be of inestimable value in his practice. Therefore, a work which places before the physician in convenient form an epitomization of this literature by persons competent to pronounce upon The Value of a Discovery or of a Method of Treatment cannot but command his highest appreciation. It is this critical and judicial function that will be assumed by the Editorial staff of the ‘‘ American Year-Book of Medicine and Surgery.” It is the special purpose of the Editor, whose experience peculiarly qualifies him for the preparation of this work, not only to review the contributions to American journals, but also the methods and discoveries reported in the leading medical journals of Europe, thus enlarging the survey and making the work characteristically international. These reviews will not simply be a series of undigested abstracts indiscriminately run together, nor will they be retro- spective of “news” one or two years old, but'the treatment presented will be synthetic and dogmatic, and will include only what isnew. Moreover, through expert condensation by experienced writers, these discussions will be COMPRISED IN A SINGLE VOLUME OF ABOUT 1200 PAGES. The work will be replete with original and selected illustrations skilfully reproduced, for the most part, in Mr. Saunders’ own studios established for the purpose, thus ensuring accuracy in delineation, affording efficient aids to a right comprehension of the text, and adding to the attractiveness of the volume. Prices: Cloth, $6.5@, net; Half-Morocco, $7.50, net. W. B. SAUNDERS, Publisher, 925 Walnut Street, Philadelphia, athe ie! Abi or Mt " i i MA usar: ten fs te iit eerie Taitedte tat at piper re " iilebye ref SHE e Ry ; nis bh Ny an a Now nqntyrcverun irda ules NAIVE iene sO Ha it Ny ON i Ns ian sr Tce tude Sue Wiha a