Diseases of swine, with particluar reference to hog-cholera . od, with here and there a blood-clot or thrombus seen in theblood-vessel. In some of the cases with high fever there is, in addition tothis parenchymatous degeneration, a well-pronounced fatty de-generation of the liver. In these cases fat-droplets appear withinthe cell, and the entire appearance of the liver is greasy and yel-lowish, the cut surface often dripping an oily, fat-like fluid whencut across with the knife. Changes in Kidneys.—It is in these organs that we find thegreatest uniformity of lesions and the most constant pres


Diseases of swine, with particluar reference to hog-cholera . od, with here and there a blood-clot or thrombus seen in theblood-vessel. In some of the cases with high fever there is, in addition tothis parenchymatous degeneration, a well-pronounced fatty de-generation of the liver. In these cases fat-droplets appear withinthe cell, and the entire appearance of the liver is greasy and yel-lowish, the cut surface often dripping an oily, fat-like fluid whencut across with the knife. Changes in Kidneys.—It is in these organs that we find thegreatest uniformity of lesions and the most constant presence ofchanges typical of the disease. There are no other organs in the LESIONS IN ABDOMINAL CAVITY 143 body which are so constant in appearance in both the acute andchronic forms of the disease as the kidneys. The condition ofthese organs, then, may be regarded as of the highest importancein the making of postmortem diagnoses. When we remove the kidney from its fatty bed in the sublumbarregion we note, as a rule, that the entire organ is much larger than.


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1910, bookpublisherphila, bookyear1914