The origin of disease : especially of disease resulting from intrinsic as opposed to extrinsic causes : with chapters on diagnosis, prognosis, and treatment . ly broken, butfew circles remaining, and the fibrous lines are thin and the spaces large, several air-sacshaving broken into one. Below are heavy bands of fibrous material, containing blood-vessels and bronchi. Fig. 65.—Pulmonary Emphysema in a Young Infant. (X 6.) Lung of an infant six weeks old that died suddenly. The picture is to show the wall is thin and fibrous and without blood-supply upon the free side. Next the lung iti


The origin of disease : especially of disease resulting from intrinsic as opposed to extrinsic causes : with chapters on diagnosis, prognosis, and treatment . ly broken, butfew circles remaining, and the fibrous lines are thin and the spaces large, several air-sacshaving broken into one. Below are heavy bands of fibrous material, containing blood-vessels and bronchi. Fig. 65.—Pulmonary Emphysema in a Young Infant. (X 6.) Lung of an infant six weeks old that died suddenly. The picture is to show the wall is thin and fibrous and without blood-supply upon the free side. Next the lung itis much thicker, and resembles the fibrous wall of a cyst. The bleb was unbroken at thepost-mortem examination, and was full of air which seemed imprisoned, there having beenno channel for its escape. The curious shape of the line and the breaks in it resultedfrom imperfect cutting and the way in which the walls were folded in course of prepara-tion. In portions of the lung substance the openings are so large that it seems that theytoo must be emphysematous. The bottom of the picture shows a cut surface ; the othersides are covered by pleura. Fig. mm. Fig. 65.


Size: 1417px × 1764px
Photo credit: © The Reading Room / Alamy / Afripics
License: Licensed
Model Released: No

Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1900, booksubjec, booksubjectpathology