Lectures on localization in diseases of the brain, delivered at the Faculté de médecine, Paris, 1875 . FlG. 40. Fig. 39. , Fig. 39.—Transverse section of the spinal cord in a case of consecutive lateral fas-cicular sclerosis ; from softening of the optico-striated bodies and the internal capsule.(Cervical region.) Fig. 40.—^Transverse section of the spinal cord in a. case of consecutive lateralfascicular sclerosis. (Dorsal region.) sis invades also the spinal fibres of the lateral fasciculus (com-pare Figs. 39, 40, and 41, and Figs. 42, 43, and 44).. Fig. 41, Fig. 42. Fig. 41.—Transverse sec


Lectures on localization in diseases of the brain, delivered at the Faculté de médecine, Paris, 1875 . FlG. 40. Fig. 39. , Fig. 39.—Transverse section of the spinal cord in a case of consecutive lateral fas-cicular sclerosis ; from softening of the optico-striated bodies and the internal capsule.(Cervical region.) Fig. 40.—^Transverse section of the spinal cord in a. case of consecutive lateralfascicular sclerosis. (Dorsal region.) sis invades also the spinal fibres of the lateral fasciculus (com-pare Figs. 39, 40, and 41, and Figs. 42, 43, and 44).. Fig. 41, Fig. 42. Fig. 41.—Transverse section of the spinal cord in a case of consecutive lateralfascicular sclerosis. (Lumbar region.) , . .. , Fig. 42. Transverse section of the spinal cord in a case of primitive lateral fascicular sclerosis. (Middle portion of cervical enlargement.) Finally, primitive sclerosis has a great tendency to extendto the neighboring spinal regions, to the white fasciculi, and 128 DISEASES OF THE BRAIN. especially the anterior cornua of the gray substance, whichis not the rule in the consecutive form.^


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade1870, bookpublishern, booksubjectbrain