The origin of disease : especially of disease resulting from intrinsic as opposed to extrinsic causes : with chapters on diagnosis, prognosis, and treatment . ¥1 JJMJi ji mgi. Fig. 40.—Capillaries within the Muscular Fibres of the Heart, (x 420.) A. From a man thirty years old who died of lead encephalopathy. The cardiac blood-vessels were injected with a solution of Berlin blue; the tissue is red. A section of papil-lary muscle of the heart cut across the fibres: b b are injected capillaries, the one partiallyand the other entirely within the muscular fibres; c, a capillary which remains unin


The origin of disease : especially of disease resulting from intrinsic as opposed to extrinsic causes : with chapters on diagnosis, prognosis, and treatment . ¥1 JJMJi ji mgi. Fig. 40.—Capillaries within the Muscular Fibres of the Heart, (x 420.) A. From a man thirty years old who died of lead encephalopathy. The cardiac blood-vessels were injected with a solution of Berlin blue; the tissue is red. A section of papil-lary muscle of the heart cut across the fibres: b b are injected capillaries, the one partiallyand the other entirely within the muscular fibres; c, a capillary which remains uninjected;its nucleus is included. B. From the same tissue as A. v, a vein stained by the injection material; b b, capil-laries whose precise situation cannot be defined. They cannot be said to be in intermuscularspaces nor to be entirely within fibres. The effect is as if the fibres were coalescing. C. From the same tissue as A. f, a capillary in a fibre; g, a capillary in the centre of avery small fibre. This is perhaps the most convincing instance of the penetration of amuscular fibre by a capillary.


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1900, booksubjec, booksubjectpathology