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Heinrich
Albert Johne
On October
23, 1894, in the Oldenburg region of Germany, a farmer purchased
a cow that failed to produce milk or gain weight satisfactorily.
A local veterinarian by the name of Herr Frederick Harmes examined
the cow and, noting the diarrhea and weight loss, suspected intestinal
tuberculosis. The cow tested negative by the tuberculin skin test
however. It died the following spring and Dr. Harmes sent its intestines,
stomach, and omentum for examination to the Veterinary Pathology
Unit in Dresden. There the tissues were examined by Dr. H.A. Johne
and Dr. L. Frothingham, a visiting scientist from the Pathology
Unit in Boston, Massachusetts. Using an acid-fast stain, abundant
acid-fast (red staining) bacteria were seen throughout the inflamed
tissues. Although the organisms resembled bacteria that caused tuberculosis,
a sample of the infected tissue containing the organisms failed
to cause disease when injected into guinea pigs. Johne and Frothingham
concluded that the disease observed in the cow was caused by the
bacterium that causes tuberculosis in birds (Mycobacterium avium)
and, in recognition of the pathological similarity to intestinal
tuberculosis (normally caused by the bacterium that causes tuberculosis
in cattle, Mycobacterium bovis), proposed the name "pseudotuberculous
enteritis" for the disease.
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