Journal of The Japanese Society of Veterinary Science
Online ISSN : 1883-9193
ISSN-L : 1883-9193
Volume 7, Issue 3
Displaying 1-5 of 5 articles from this issue
  • EFFECT OF THE TREATMENT BY MEANS OF COMPENSATION OF CALCIUM CARBONATE
    Kanta NIIMI, Kiyoshi KATO
    1928 Volume 7 Issue 3 Pages 181-189
    Published: 1928
    Released on J-STAGE: October 26, 2009
    JOURNAL FREE ACCESS
  • Tosinobu MIYAMOTO
    1928 Volume 7 Issue 3 Pages 190-206
    Published: 1928
    Released on J-STAGE: February 19, 2009
    JOURNAL FREE ACCESS
    1. It is very difficult to produce cystitis in healthy animals by injection into the cyst of bloody urine containing abundant diplococci and other microorganisms, or of their pure cultures. The normal mucous membrane of cyst has very strong self-protective power against the invasion, or may probably soon recover from the slight lesion, and the normal urine has usually certain controlling power against some injurious microorganisms.
    2. Two kinds of diplococcus isolated from the patient's urine, temporarily named “Diplococcus haematuriae bovis”, have no special aetiological meaning compared with other microorganisms and other urine ingredients.
    But because these 2 kinds are most abundant and common, and they are also proved occasionally in the tissue or in cells of the inflammatory m. m. and the growth of the cyst, it may be said that they are more serious actors than the other several changeable and unstable microorganisms and ingredients in introducing as well as promoting the cystitis.
    3. There are several factors (see above) which may contribute to produce the cystitis but the actual irritants of the urocystitis haemorrhagica are not yet decided.
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  • C. KAKIZAKI, S. NAKANISHI, J. NAKAMURA, Y. TOSHIJIMA
    1928 Volume 7 Issue 3 Pages 207-218
    Published: 1928
    Released on J-STAGE: February 19, 2009
    JOURNAL FREE ACCESS
  • SECOND REPORT
    HIDEO OGUNI
    1928 Volume 7 Issue 3 Pages 219-242_1
    Published: 1928
    Released on J-STAGE: February 19, 2009
    JOURNAL FREE ACCESS
    With regard to the etiology of an elephantiasis-like disease known as "Wahi" or "Kose" in our native cattle, I reported in this journal Vol. VI, No. 2 that from the histological point of view the causal agent of this disease was a kind of microfilaria. In this paper I want to state the results obtained by further experiments on this problem.
    Although the microfilaria appears in the blood the year round, they are found more numerous in summer. Their appearance in the blood of peripheral veins seems tohave a slight periodicity. A great number of microfilaria are observable at 6-9 o'clock in the afternoon, but it is not so remarkable as in the case of embryos of Filaria bancrofti. The appearance resembles the embryo of a filaria, but the adult worm is not yet decided. Therefore, I have attempted to find them by means of post-mortem examination.
    As the result of this examination, many filaria-like worms were discovered in the abdominal cavity of the affected cattle. The worm was long, thread-like in size and white in colour, and the male was smaller than the female. It was attenuated at both ends. The tail of the male was coiled up spirally; that of the female was straight or slightly curved. The uterus contained eggs and embryos in a remarkable number, and the appearance of the latter resembled closely the microfilaria in the blood.
    In order to determine whether the embryos can appear in the circulating blood, I put these worms into the abdominal cavity of rabbits. As the result of this experiment I found the microfilaria appeared in the blood of those animals in 3 days after the operation and on the 10th day they were found in maximal number.
    Furthermore, I discovered that these worms could be classified into two species by the microscopical examination. One species had strong dorsal and ventral teeth separated by a wide depression from the centre of which arose a semi-circular lip-like elevation. The caudal region of the female was loosely spiral and terminated in a knob-like extremity surrounded by an irregular ring of pointed spines and bearing a pair of lateral appendices close to the extremity. The tail of the male was closely spiral and there were four pairs of preanal and four pairs of postanal papillae, but occasionally one papilla was found closely in front of the cloaca.
    The other species closely resembled the former in shape, but the mouth was very small, about one-half the former in diameter, and the posterior extremity of the female terminated in a smooth knob.
    From these findings I should like to regard the former, as Boulenger, as Setaria labiato-papillosa and the latter as S. digitata. and to consider that the microfilaria in the blood of affected cattle is closely related to these worms.
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  • KAZUO TSUGE
    1928 Volume 7 Issue 3 Pages 243-251
    Published: 1928
    Released on J-STAGE: February 19, 2009
    JOURNAL FREE ACCESS
    Recently we found 3 inagglutinable strains amongst 19 strains of the glanders bacilli; they are inagglutinable against the anti- No. 7 -strain (of B. mallei)-serum, while they agglutinate in other 18 anti-serums. Such inagglutinability as above mentioned is quitely different in its nature from the ordinarily described inagglutinability. These inagglutinable strains absorb off agglutinins from the anti-No. 7-strain-serum as they do in other 18 antiserums, and anti-inagglutinable-strain-serum agglutinates all 19 strains. Therefore, our 3 inagglutinable strains are agglutinable as other 16 agglutinable strains when they met with serums other than anti-No. 7 strain-serum while they are inagglutinable against anti-No. 7-serum. I intend to explain these phenomena as follows:
    In bacterial cell there are receptors which combine the agglutinin to the cell; each of these receptors has corresponding agglutinable substance, and the agglutinin which united with corresponding receptor acts only on the agglutinable substance which belongs to this receptor, thus the agglutination occurs. But, if the agglutinable substance belongs to the receptor which anchored with the agglutinin, or there is some change which is not suitable to agglutinate, or there is something which let the agglutinable substance inagglutinable, or agglutinable substance is deficient, no agglutination occurs.
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