. The pathology and differential diagnosis of infectious diseases of animals : prepared for students and practitioners of veterinary medicine . Veterinary medicine; Communicable diseases in animals. 380 BABIES in the state of Maryland; in 1785 it v/as prevalent throughout the Northern States and soon after it spread to the South. It has caused heavy losses among farm animals throughout Europe and America. It has called forth careful study from many of the ablest men in the medical professions. Among them may be mentioned John Hunter in England, Viborg in Copenhagen, Waldinger in Vienna, Hertwi


. The pathology and differential diagnosis of infectious diseases of animals : prepared for students and practitioners of veterinary medicine . Veterinary medicine; Communicable diseases in animals. 380 BABIES in the state of Maryland; in 1785 it v/as prevalent throughout the Northern States and soon after it spread to the South. It has caused heavy losses among farm animals throughout Europe and America. It has called forth careful study from many of the ablest men in the medical professions. Among them may be mentioned John Hunter in England, Viborg in Copenhagen, Waldinger in Vienna, Hertwig in Germany and Pasteur in France. Without detracting in the least from the great work of other investigators, we may say that to Pasteur and his co-laborers, Nocard and Roux, we owe much of the knowledge of the nature of rabies which we possess at the present Fig. 89. negri bodies in nerve cells : (a) nuclei of cells ; (6) negri bodies {after Frothingham). Geographical distribution. Rabies is known to exist or at some time to have existed in almost every country on the globe. Australia is the largest area which is said to be absolutely free from it. This exemption is the gratifying result of a rigid quarantine enforced against dogs imported on that island. It is wide spread in the United States. Etiology. In 1903, Negri described small bodies or cell inclu- sions, since called Negri bodies, which he found in the Purkingie cells of the cerebellum and in the large ganglion cells of the Ammons horn. Negri believed these bodies to be the etiological factor of the disease and classified them among the Please note that these images are extracted from scanned page images that may have been digitally enhanced for readability - coloration and appearance of these illustrations may not perfectly resemble the original Moore, Veranus A. (Veranus Alva), 1859-1931. New York : Macmillan


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1910, booksubjectveterin, bookyear1916