Symptoms of ulceroglandular include lymphadenpathy, fever, chills, headache, and malaise. About 90%-35% of patients may present cutaneous ulcers. When ulcers are absent, it is called primary ulceroglandular disease. Oculoglandular tularemia results
from contact to the eyes from an infected fluid or blood. Typhoidal or septicemic tulu-rwmia produces fever, prostration, and weight loss, without adenopathy (any disease of the gland, especially a lymphatic gland). After exposure, the ussal treatment is 2 weeks of tetracyline.
Streptomycin is given for more severe exposures. Aminoglycosides, genatamycin, kanamycin, and chloramphenicol are also effesctive antibiotics. Once a person recovers, hr or she has permanent immunity from the disease. A vaccine is under develop-meat and has beem successful during tests on more than 5000 persons, without sinificant adverse reactions.