Treatise on gynæcology : medical and surgical . Fig. 17-1.—Epithelioma of the Cervix Extendingto the Vagina ; Papillary Form. Fig. 175.—Epithelioma of the Cavity of theCervix. On the left is an extension toward thefundus of the uterus. sure. The great frequence of renal disease in cancer of the uterus hasbeen known for a long time, and recently made the subject of specialstudy. Lancereaux3 asserts that this ascending nephritis is con-stant when the disease is at all advanced, and during twenty-fiveyears I have never seen it absent at autopsy, unless the patient haddied prematurely from metrorr


Treatise on gynæcology : medical and surgical . Fig. 17-1.—Epithelioma of the Cervix Extendingto the Vagina ; Papillary Form. Fig. 175.—Epithelioma of the Cavity of theCervix. On the left is an extension toward thefundus of the uterus. sure. The great frequence of renal disease in cancer of the uterus hasbeen known for a long time, and recently made the subject of specialstudy. Lancereaux3 asserts that this ascending nephritis is con-stant when the disease is at all advanced, and during twenty-fiveyears I have never seen it absent at autopsy, unless the patient haddied prematurely from metrorrhagia. The experiments of Straus and Clermonti on the effects of ligationof the ureters in animals, which confirm and explain the older observa-tions of Aufrecht in Germany and Charcot and Gombault in France,clearly explain these lesions. They found that ligation produced a 340 CLINICAL AND OPEEATIVE GYNECOLOGY. progressive atrophy of the kidney which destroyed the distinction ofcortical and medullary portions, and that the papillae and py


Size: 1313px × 1903px
Photo credit: © The Reading Room / Alamy / Afripics
License: Licensed
Model Released: No

Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade1890, booksubje, booksubjectgynecology