The practice of obstetrics, designed for the use of students and practitioners of medicine . y (interstitial endometritis of Hegar). A fibrous change may occurin the vilH themselves, or in the interspaces; the usual contraction, obliterationof vessels, and fatty change following. This fatty tissue is friable and greasy tothe touch. It greases any substance with which it comes in contact, and israther firm in consistency. (8) Miscellaneous Degenerations.—So-called hyaline degeneration is a pheno-menon which accompanies white infarction. Pigment deposits consist of hemo-globin or its derivatives


The practice of obstetrics, designed for the use of students and practitioners of medicine . y (interstitial endometritis of Hegar). A fibrous change may occurin the vilH themselves, or in the interspaces; the usual contraction, obliterationof vessels, and fatty change following. This fatty tissue is friable and greasy tothe touch. It greases any substance with which it comes in contact, and israther firm in consistency. (8) Miscellaneous Degenerations.—So-called hyaline degeneration is a pheno-menon which accompanies white infarction. Pigment deposits consist of hemo-globin or its derivatives and result from extravasations of blood. They areusually small and disseminate, and are devoid of pathological degeneration such as attacks the chorionic villi may occur at times inthe placenta. 8. Placental Tumors.—(i) Placentomata: Excluding cysts, which are prob-ably better regarded as an expres-sion of degenerative change, andvesicular moles and deciduoma ma-lignum which belong to the pathol-ogy of the deciduse, a number ofplacental neoplasms—about fifty in.


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1910, booksubjectobstetrics, bookyear1