. The medical and surgical history of the war of the rebellion. (1861-65). Prepared, in accordance with the acts of Congress, under the direction of Surgeon general Joseph K. Barnes, United States army . S, Leipzig, 187:!, Taf. XII, Fig. 5. .See also IIKUUNER—in Zieinssons Cycl., Am. edit., Vol. I, [New Yorl;, 1874,) p. 54:i. t A Bimilar increase of the adenoid tissno of llio mucous membrane of tlie small intestine would appear to have been observed by Bkale-ificroscopical Researches on the Chnlora, No. V, Tbo Medical Times and Gazette, Vol II, for 18UG, p. :)38—in tho intestines of subjects d


. The medical and surgical history of the war of the rebellion. (1861-65). Prepared, in accordance with the acts of Congress, under the direction of Surgeon general Joseph K. Barnes, United States army . S, Leipzig, 187:!, Taf. XII, Fig. 5. .See also IIKUUNER—in Zieinssons Cycl., Am. edit., Vol. I, [New Yorl;, 1874,) p. 54:i. t A Bimilar increase of the adenoid tissno of llio mucous membrane of tlie small intestine would appear to have been observed by Bkale-ificroscopical Researches on the Chnlora, No. V, Tbo Medical Times and Gazette, Vol II, for 18UG, p. :)38—in tho intestines of subjects dead of Asiaticcholera. He describes it as combined with a wasting and shrivelling of tlie glands of Lieberliilhn, allied to that wasting wliich occurs in the glandstructure of tho liver in cases of cirrhosis, and of tho kidney in elironic degeneration of this organ ; and his diagrams. Figs. 14 to 18, not merely representthe follicles as more or less pushed apart, but as diminisliing in diameter in proportion as they are separated. This wasting of tlie glands of LioberkUiiuwas not observed at the Museum in any of the cases of intestinal inflammalion examined. 1 Supra, p. JUS. 5 Supra, p. PERPENDICULAR SECTION OF ILEUMShowingenlargement and protrusion of the solitar/ gland eIdagnified 12 diameters. HISTOLOGY OF THE INFLAMED INTESTINES. 327 ination should be made much sooner after death tliaii is usually practiced. Certainly theautopsies which furnished the material examined at the Museum, in connection witli diar-rhoea and dysentery, were generally made long enough aftor death to render it certain thatthe separation of the epithelium observed was merely a post mortem phenomenon.^ Rindfleischf still maintains that an endogenous formation of pus corpuscles may takeplace in the epithelial cells of inflamed mucous membranes, though he does not look uponthis as the exclusive mode of their formation. The observations on which this view isbased, with the single excep


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