The practice of obstetrics, designed for the use of students and practitioners of medicine . Fig. 47S.—Incomplete Miscarriage atTHE Fifteenth Week. The amnion,covered by shreds of chorion and deci-dua, was expelled unruptured. Most ofthe chorion and decidua, and the entireplacenta, were retained in the uterinecavity. (| natural size).—(Authorscase.) Fig. 479.—Blood Mole Changing into aFlesh Mole, w, White area in the bloodmass; b, blood extravasation into rudi-mentary placenta; rs, outer rough surfaceof mole; o, ovum cavity with amnion cutopen.—(Bumm.) calcified, and is then termed fcetus lith


The practice of obstetrics, designed for the use of students and practitioners of medicine . Fig. 47S.—Incomplete Miscarriage atTHE Fifteenth Week. The amnion,covered by shreds of chorion and deci-dua, was expelled unruptured. Most ofthe chorion and decidua, and the entireplacenta, were retained in the uterinecavity. (| natural size).—(Authorscase.) Fig. 479.—Blood Mole Changing into aFlesh Mole, w, White area in the bloodmass; b, blood extravasation into rudi-mentary placenta; rs, outer rough surfaceof mole; o, ovum cavity with amnion cutopen.—(Bumm.) calcified, and is then termed fcetus lithopcedion (Fig. 446). Periovular Hemorrhage;Placental Apoplexy : Up to the end of the second month there is a marked ten-dency for the blood to spread out and form a thin layer ^ to li inches (4 to30 mm.) in thickness, upon the surface of the chorion, causing the ovum to re-semble a piece of flesh, bluish or blackish in color. The enveloping mem-branes are seldom ruptured, and since this collection of blood is often largerthan the ovum itself, it goes to show that the ovum is not


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1910, booksubjectobstetrics, bookyear1