. The principles and practice of veterinary surgery . s^ M--. Fig. 79 shows the condition of a foot four weeks after thefirst or febrile stage (slippering). times even prior to that event, the horny walls separate, moreparticularly at the posterior part of the feet, sometimes veryslightly, occasionally a inere line of attempted separation beingobservable, at other times more completely, from their attach- ^ Vesication round the coronet should not necessarily produce separation of thehorn therefrom; nor does it, unless, as in eczema epizooticaf where, in evenslight cases, the vesicles will be f
. The principles and practice of veterinary surgery . s^ M--. Fig. 79 shows the condition of a foot four weeks after thefirst or febrile stage (slippering). times even prior to that event, the horny walls separate, moreparticularly at the posterior part of the feet, sometimes veryslightly, occasionally a inere line of attempted separation beingobservable, at other times more completely, from their attach- ^ Vesication round the coronet should not necessarily produce separation of thehorn therefrom; nor does it, unless, as in eczema epizooticaf where, in evenslight cases, the vesicles will be found to extend underneath the coronary band. FOOT-KOT m SHEEP. 403 ments to the coronary substance, or, where the attack has beenviolent, from the connecting laminae also, and thus the hornydigits are more or less completely separated from the sensitiveand vascular structures within ? and in a varying period, depend-ing on the severity of the attack, the claw can be pulled off withease, or is cast off spontaneously, leaving the exposed livingstructures sm
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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1900, booksubjectveterin, bookyear1904