Quain's elements of anatomy . of the cells and their miclei, as was stated by J. are said to end by gradually tajaering or varicose extremities, butaccording to Elischer each nerve-fibril terminates by a slight bulbousexpansion opposite the nucleus of a contractile cell. In the cardiac muscular tissue the ner^es form networks withvery long meshes. The nervous fibrils become closely applied to themuscidar fibres but do not penetrate the latter according to Fischer, norare motorial end-plates, such as occur in voluntary cross-striated muscle,to be found in the heart. L. Gerlach, on t


Quain's elements of anatomy . of the cells and their miclei, as was stated by J. are said to end by gradually tajaering or varicose extremities, butaccording to Elischer each nerve-fibril terminates by a slight bulbousexpansion opposite the nucleus of a contractile cell. In the cardiac muscular tissue the ner^es form networks withvery long meshes. The nervous fibrils become closely applied to themuscidar fibres but do not penetrate the latter according to Fischer, norare motorial end-plates, such as occur in voluntary cross-striated muscle,to be found in the heart. L. Gerlach, on the other hand, affirms thepenetration of the muscular cells by nerve-fibrils. The nerves of voluntary muscles terminate for the most part inspecial expansions, to which the term motorial cnd-pJates has beenapplied. As mentioned in the account of the muscular tissue, the nerves inthe voluntary muscles form plexuses, of which the branches gTow finerand the meshes closer as they advance further into the tissue. The Fig. h.


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Keywords: ., boo, bookcentury1800, booksubjectanatomy, booksubjecthumananatomy