General physiology; an outline of the science of life . Fig. 237.—Curve of fatigue ; decrease of theheight of the curves with numerous suc-cessive contractions of the flexor musclesof the fingers. (After Mosso.) 464 GENERAL PHYSIOLOGY fatigued specimens only Dobies line was to be seen clearly, andthe whole contents of the segments stained uniformly without anydifferentiation of the discs being noticeable (Fig. 239). But thegranules, or sarcosomes, lying in the sarcoplasm between the. Fig. 238.—Curve of tetanus of a fatigued muscle of a frog. individual fibrillae were enormously enlarged in the
General physiology; an outline of the science of life . Fig. 237.—Curve of fatigue ; decrease of theheight of the curves with numerous suc-cessive contractions of the flexor musclesof the fingers. (After Mosso.) 464 GENERAL PHYSIOLOGY fatigued specimens only Dobies line was to be seen clearly, andthe whole contents of the segments stained uniformly without anydifferentiation of the discs being noticeable (Fig. 239). But thegranules, or sarcosomes, lying in the sarcoplasm between the. Fig. 238.—Curve of tetanus of a fatigued muscle of a frog. individual fibrillae were enormously enlarged in the fatigued, incomparison with the resting, muscle. It would lead us too far toconsider in detail the significance of these changes. Hodge (92),G. Mann (94), and Lugaro (95), have recently made known distinctmicroscopic phenomena of fatigue in the ganglion-cells of mammals,
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Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade1890, bookidgen, booksubjectphysiology