. A system of anatomy for the use of students of medicine (Volume 1). 378 SEBACEOUS Fig. 24. —Fig. 24, represents the orifices of the sebaceous glands, as they are seen inthe nose, after it has been deprived ofits epidermis. Each follicle consists ofa simple depression or doubling inwardsof the cutis vera, which becomes morevascular and thin where it forms thewalls of the follicle. The sebaceousfollicles, according to E. Weber, aremuch larger and entirely distinct fromthose forming the bulbs of the latter, too, are situated moredeeply, being often found in the subcu-taneo
. A system of anatomy for the use of students of medicine (Volume 1). 378 SEBACEOUS Fig. 24. —Fig. 24, represents the orifices of the sebaceous glands, as they are seen inthe nose, after it has been deprived ofits epidermis. Each follicle consists ofa simple depression or doubling inwardsof the cutis vera, which becomes morevascular and thin where it forms thewalls of the follicle. The sebaceousfollicles, according to E. Weber, aremuch larger and entirely distinct fromthose forming the bulbs of the latter, too, are situated moredeeply, being often found in the subcu-taneous cellular tissue. They differ also,according to him, in their structure;each sebaceous follicle being composedof four or five compartments or cells agglomerated are also larger than those of the bulbs of the hairs; thelargest diameter of a sebaceous gland, (the transverse,) observedby Dr. Weber, was three-fourths of a line.— Muscular fibres have been supposed by some persons to existin the skin, but such fibres have never been demonstrated in skin of the scrotum i
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Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookid101532043x1nlmnihgov, booksubjectanatomy