Manual of pathological anatomy . pses. The colour is usually yellowish,but may, from vascularity, or from haemorrhage, pass through allshades of pink to a bright cherry red; and very beautiful mottlings,like those of a transparent pebble, are sometimes thus portions are often white and opaque, either from theadmixture of fatty tissue, or from the presence of very numerous * The tumours called by Paget fibro-cellular tumours properly so called, willhere be described under the name myxoma.+ Surgical Pathology, second edition, p. Die Krankhaften Geschwulste, i. p. 862. 138 NE


Manual of pathological anatomy . pses. The colour is usually yellowish,but may, from vascularity, or from haemorrhage, pass through allshades of pink to a bright cherry red; and very beautiful mottlings,like those of a transparent pebble, are sometimes thus portions are often white and opaque, either from theadmixture of fatty tissue, or from the presence of very numerous * The tumours called by Paget fibro-cellular tumours properly so called, willhere be described under the name myxoma.+ Surgical Pathology, second edition, p. Die Krankhaften Geschwulste, i. p. 862. 138 NEW GROTVTH OF MUCOUS TISSUE. round cells, whicli sometimes give the tumour a ** medullaryappearance. On examining the fluid which escapes, or a small frag-ment of the tumour, blood globules will be seen, but in fresh speci-mens hardly, it may be, anything else, the cellular elements beingsingularly pellucid. On treatment with carmine, «S:c., or sometimeswithout, stellate or multipolar cells are seen, which are fragments Fig. Section of myxoma from the gluteal , Large stellate, or branched corpuscles, forming a network by union of theirbranches, b, Round cells, or free leucocytes, c, Similar cells, appearing as if enclosedin the larger corpuscles. Magnified 400 diameters. (Payne, Trans. Path. Soc,vol. XX., 1869.) of the cellular network. The tumour is seldom sufficiently solidto permit the cutting of a good section, but when this is possible thecomplete network of anastomosing cells is seen. There are always,beside these, round cells resembling those of embryonic tissue (or ofgranulations) which form no part of the network just spoken of. Theyexist in variable number, but when very numerous, produce astructure like that hereafter to be described as medidlary sometimes arises as a hyperplastic growth from theplacenta, forming the well-known *uterine hydatids, whichconsist of an outgrowth of the mucous tissue, which the tufts ofthe chorion, equally wit


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