. An American text-book of obstetrics. For practitioners and students. Convoluted Ovary. Cervix. Fig. 51.—Uterus, tubes, and ovaries of a child(Sutton). Cervix. Fimbria Broad ligament. Fig. 50.—Ovary and tube (natural size) of a woman of sixty-eight years (Sutton). tuting the ovarian ligament; the upper and blunter end, or the tubal pole,after being embraced by the arching oviduct, receives the lower border of thefimbriated extremity of the Fallopian uterus. tube, and is further connected to thewall of the pelvis by the ovario-jielvicfold of the peritoneum. The ovarylies within a perito


. An American text-book of obstetrics. For practitioners and students. Convoluted Ovary. Cervix. Fig. 51.—Uterus, tubes, and ovaries of a child(Sutton). Cervix. Fimbria Broad ligament. Fig. 50.—Ovary and tube (natural size) of a woman of sixty-eight years (Sutton). tuting the ovarian ligament; the upper and blunter end, or the tubal pole,after being embraced by the arching oviduct, receives the lower border of thefimbriated extremity of the Fallopian uterus. tube, and is further connected to thewall of the pelvis by the ovario-jielvicfold of the peritoneum. The ovarylies within a peritoneal recess, the fossaovarii (Claudius), which occupies theposterior part of the side wall of thepelvis, usually bounded by the internaliliac artery and the ureter behind and the obturator vessels and nerve in the anterior and posterior borders of the gland, as well as its inner sur-face, are closely related to and are partly masked by the curves of the —The ovary is divided into the cortex and the medulla (Fig. 52),the boundaries of which are conve


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade1890, booksubjectobstetrics, bookyear1