. Lectures on surgical pathology : delivered at the Royal College of Surgeons of England. ned, with one or two nucleoli (). But some appear wrinkled or collapsed, as if shrivelled; somecontain numerous minute oil-particles, representing all the stages tocomplete fatty degeneration, and the formation of granular bodies (, 63); some are uniformly but palely granular, like large pale cor-puscles of lymph or blood ; some are yet larger, nearly filling the cells,pellucid, like large clear vesicles with one or more oil-particles inclosed ;and some have irregularities of outline, which a
. Lectures on surgical pathology : delivered at the Royal College of Surgeons of England. ned, with one or two nucleoli (). But some appear wrinkled or collapsed, as if shrivelled; somecontain numerous minute oil-particles, representing all the stages tocomplete fatty degeneration, and the formation of granular bodies (, 63); some are uniformly but palely granular, like large pale cor-puscles of lymph or blood ; some are yet larger, nearly filling the cells,pellucid, like large clear vesicles with one or more oil-particles inclosed ;and some have irregularities of outline, which are the first in a seriesof gradational forms, at the other extremity of which are various stel-late, branched, or spicate corpuscles (Figs. 63 A, 64, 65). I have not been able to discern any constant rule of coincidence be-tween these forms of nuclei and the various forms of cells, nor betweeneither and any of the enumerated appearances of the intercellular orbasis-substance. All modes of combinations have appeared amongthem; only, on the whole, the completely developed cells have the. * Fig. 64. Free nuclei: some simple, and some enlarged, and variously beset withbranching processes. From a cartilaginous tumor under the angle of the lower jaw. Mag-nified 400 times. ?j Fig. 65. Similar nuclei variously distorted and shrivelled. From a mixed cartilaginoustumor over the parotid ; similarly magnified. CARTILAaiNOUS TUMORS. 441 best nuclei, and the degenerate or imperfect of both are usually incompany. The last-named nuclei, with irregular outlines, deserve a more par-ticular description, both because they are, so far as I know, found inno normal cartilage in any of the vertebrata, and because their imita-ting, in some measure, the forms of bone-corpuscles, might wronglysuggest that they have a constant relation to the ossifying process. They were first described, I think, by Miiller; and have since beennoticed in cartilaginous tumors by Mr. Quekett, and many others. Ihave examined
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