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

Chapter 280: ULCERATION. GANGRENE. BED SORES.
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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.

ULCERATION. GANGRENE. BED SORES.

Causes: inflammation, exudation, obstructed circulation, lesions in trophic nerve centres, sclerosis, toxins, ergot, caustics, freezing, gangrene, microbes, cryptogams, spoiled fodder, white skins, buckwheat, insolation. Symptoms: inflammation, molecular disintegration, dry sloughs. Treatment: camphorated spirit or vaseline, antiseptics, phenol, salicylic acid, iodoform, iodine, creolin, lysol, tar, detach sloughs.

In all cases in which the skin is violently inflamed, and particularly when the seat of an abundant exudation or infiltration which blocks circulation and retards nutrition, the tissues are especially liable to death, molecular or by sloughing, and formation of bedsores. As a general cause lesions of the trophic centres in the medulla and cord must be accepted as a cause of the imperfect nutrition and lack of vitality. This is seen in sclerosis of the cord, but may appear as the result of poisoning of the myelon as well as the gangrenous tissues by absorbed toxins. Again a common cause of circumscribed cutaneous gangrene is the capillary contraction and obstruction of ergotism. This usually involves all the tissues, soft and hard, at the distal end of a member or organ, causing the separation of all at one common level, but in less severe forms the skin only sloughs, in the form of round or irregular masses, usually around the coronet, and the resulting sores heal up under an appropriate diet. Cauterization and freezing may be a further occasion of gangrene. Finally, the local operation of the microbes of gangrene, determines both ulceration and sloughing. Cryptogams on spoiled fodders (trefoil, lupins, vetches, rusty gramineæ) are also charged with developing gangrene.

White skins or white patches on the skin are especially liable to suffer as in cases of fagopyrism and “grease”. The action of the solar rays in summer must therefore be accepted as a concurrent cause.

Symptoms. The first symptoms are usually those of cutaneous congestion or inflammation. Redness, swelling, pitting on pressure, or tension, are accompanied or followed by vesicles, chaps or erosions. The margins of the sores become thick and irregular, often undermined, and they gradually increase by breaking down of tissue in their depth or on their margin. In other cases patches of skin dry or wither up, either in superficial layer or throughout its entire thickness, and these dried extra vascular sloughs are gradually detached by granulation beneath. The surrounding tumefaction is always extensive and the sores may expose the deep seated structures—tendons, ligaments, fascia, bones, joints—causing widespread destruction.

Treatment. If the disease is due to capillary occlusion of nervous origin, compresses with camphorated spirit, followed by camphorated vaseline may be of advantage. If otherwise, antiseptics will be in order: carbolated vaseline, salicylic acid cream, iodoformed vaseline, a weak iodine ointment, creolin, or lysol in water, tar water. When the dead tissues are partially separated the detachment may be hastened with knife or scissors and the sores treated like a septic sore.