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Text book of veterinary medicine, Volume 3 (of 5)

Chapter 249: ERYTHEMA. ERYTHEMATOUS DERMATITIS.
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About This Book

Comprehensive clinical manual detailing disorders of the nervous, genitourinary, ocular, and integumentary systems in domestic animals. It begins with principles of neural control and general symptomatology, classifying motor, sensory, and psychic disturbances and methods for localizing lesions. The text describes specific conditions such as seizures, paralysis, meningitis, intracranial hemorrhage, tumors, and toxicoses, and outlines diagnostic signs and pathological causes. Later sections address urine analysis and renal disease, urinary tract inflammation and calculi, and diseases of the eye, skin, and constitutional systems, combining pathological description with clinical signs, differential diagnosis, and practical guidance for examination and interpretation.

ERYTHEMA. ERYTHEMATOUS DERMATITIS.

Definition, congestion, heat, redness, tenderness without eruption. Sheep: swine: dogs: white horses and cattle. Causes: slight irritants. Symptoms: congestion momentarily effaced by pressure, may go on to a distinct irruption.

Definition. Congestion of the papillary and adjacent layers of the skin with heat, redness, and tenderness, or a diffuse superficial inflammation with some superadded swelling.

Genera susceptible. The affection is seen in sheep, swine, dogs, and in white horses and cattle or on white parts of the skin. It is not readily recognized on pigmented parts.

Causes. The action of any slight irritant: pressure, friction, brushing, currying, blows, vesicants, rubefacients, stings, parasitism, radiant heat, intense sunshine, cold (reaction), storm, plunging in cold streams when heated, feeding on stimulating agents, notably buckwheat.

Symptoms. On white skins there is a uniformly diffused redness, without papule or other eruption, and the color may be momentarily effaced leaving a perfectly white spot, made by the pressure of the finger. The affected part is warm, tender, and it may be, itchy. It may be but the first step of a distinct eruption of another kind, such as variola, vesicles, papules, pustules, but then the affection takes a different name. It has been named according to its seat, cause and nature as follows: