Canine distemper, its complications, sequelae, and treatment . •1 • ,c- -•, * .-tf-tiSSfW* i^MJ^.Ji-/ , - >». i* ^ •• P^iS. -e^.*-? > /*v -J-* iw> Fig. 3.—Pasteurella Cams of LigniAres and Phisalix. x 1, of National Veterinary Medical Association, 1902. natural defensive powers and facilitated secondary infec-tions. Indeed, it is an opinion shared by many observers,including myself, that animals succumb to these secondaryinfections more often than to the primary , Cadiot and BFeton (1901) pursued some investigations,as a result of which they concluded that the


Canine distemper, its complications, sequelae, and treatment . •1 • ,c- -•, * .-tf-tiSSfW* i^MJ^.Ji-/ , - >». i* ^ •• P^iS. -e^.*-? > /*v -J-* iw> Fig. 3.—Pasteurella Cams of LigniAres and Phisalix. x 1, of National Veterinary Medical Association, 1902. natural defensive powers and facilitated secondary infec-tions. Indeed, it is an opinion shared by many observers,including myself, that animals succumb to these secondaryinfections more often than to the primary , Cadiot and BFeton (1901) pursued some investigations,as a result of which they concluded that the infectiousbroncho-pneumonia was a disease quite independent ofdistemper proper. Von Wundseheim (1905) discovered an organism ofthe hemorrhagic septicaemia type which he named 3 34 CANINE DISTEMPER B. canicidus, pure cultures of which produced the usualtypical symptoms of distemper. Its habitats were thenasal discharge, spleen, and blood. Carre (1905), by his numerous experiments, satisfiedhimself (and a considerable following) that the conta-gium of distemper was a powerfully pathogenic filterablevirus, which could be


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Keywords: ., bo, bookcentury1900, bookdecade1920, booksubjectdogs, bookyear1922