Operative gynecology : . Fig. 186.—Section of the Wall of a Cyst from the Ante-rior Wall of the Vagina, just to the Right and Pos-terior to the Urethral Orifice. The cyst walls were smooth, thin, and transparent; thecavity was empty, except for a few clumps of round cellshere and there, a, Stratified epithelium; b, a vaginal glandlined with ciliated cylindrical epithelium situated in the con-nective tissue in the wall of the cyst; c, blood lying free in thestroma; d, large spindle-shaped connective-tissue cells; e, cyl-indrical ciliated epithelium lining the cyst cavity. Path. Magnifi


Operative gynecology : . Fig. 186.—Section of the Wall of a Cyst from the Ante-rior Wall of the Vagina, just to the Right and Pos-terior to the Urethral Orifice. The cyst walls were smooth, thin, and transparent; thecavity was empty, except for a few clumps of round cellshere and there, a, Stratified epithelium; b, a vaginal glandlined with ciliated cylindrical epithelium situated in the con-nective tissue in the wall of the cyst; c, blood lying free in thestroma; d, large spindle-shaped connective-tissue cells; e, cyl-indrical ciliated epithelium lining the cyst cavity. Path. Magnified 360 times. (This figure is similar to thatdescribed in the text.) VAGINAL CYSTS. 317 wall. From the foregoing facts, there seems to be no doubt that vaginal glandsexist in a moderate percentage of cases (see Fig. 186). ^«>?S*3^^KS«^. Bw


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1900, booksubjectgynecology, bookyear1