Clinical lectures on the principles and practice of medicine . Fig. 212. 204 PRINCIPLES OF mixed up with extravasated blood, giving to the contained liquid variouscolors and appearances, according to the age of the extravasation. Thusit may be red, dark brown (resembling coffee), of a dark-greenish tinge,etc. etc. Sometimes it is of a dark bluish or blackish tint from excessof pigmentary deposit. 8. Sometimes the contents of the cystic growth are formed of a solidexudation,which has undergone the sarcomatous trans-formation as previously described, and wholly consistsof fusiform cel


Clinical lectures on the principles and practice of medicine . Fig. 212. 204 PRINCIPLES OF mixed up with extravasated blood, giving to the contained liquid variouscolors and appearances, according to the age of the extravasation. Thusit may be red, dark brown (resembling coffee), of a dark-greenish tinge,etc. etc. Sometimes it is of a dark bluish or blackish tint from excessof pigmentary deposit. 8. Sometimes the contents of the cystic growth are formed of a solidexudation,which has undergone the sarcomatous trans-formation as previously described, and wholly consistsof fusiform cells (Fig. 218). The exudation pouredinto such cysts may pass into the cancerous forma-tion, and then the characters we have described willbe associated with those which distinguish cancer. 9. Some cysts contain the peculiar secretion of theorgan in which they are found. Thus cysts in the livermay be full of bile, and those in the kidney of urine10. Lastly, cysts may contain a greater or smaller amount of mineralmatter. The mode in which encysted growths are developed is—1st, By thehypertrophy of


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade1870, booksubjectmedicine, bookyear187