The internal secretions and the principles of medicine . ever, is that some of them penetratethe gland proper, while others pass directly to the walls of thesubmaxillary branches of the facial artery, and to the latterlikewise. Now% all these vessels are wdthin the limits of thosesupplied with vasa vasorum, at least that first given by Henle, millimeter. Their walls thus receive blood as do other struc-tures, and are also oxygenated directly from the general circu-lation. These nutrient arteries, the largest of which, accord-ing to Gimbert,^ have a diameter of millimeter, form ananast


The internal secretions and the principles of medicine . ever, is that some of them penetratethe gland proper, while others pass directly to the walls of thesubmaxillary branches of the facial artery, and to the latterlikewise. Now% all these vessels are wdthin the limits of thosesupplied with vasa vasorum, at least that first given by Henle, millimeter. Their walls thus receive blood as do other struc-tures, and are also oxygenated directly from the general circu-lation. These nutrient arteries, the largest of which, accord-ing to Gimbert,^ have a diameter of millimeter, form ananastomosing network in the tunica advcntitia, composedchiefly of fibrous connective tissue intermixed with a networkof elastic fibers, but Tvolliker, Eberth, Aeby^^ and otherssince found that the outer third of the middle coat, which con-tains a large proportion of muscular cells disposed mainly in Gimbert: Jour, de Ianat. et de physiol., T. ii, p. 630, : Striekers Handbuch, S. 192, 1869.«Aeby: Der Bau d. menschl. Korpers, S. 782, 1871. Fig. Fig. 2. J


Size: 1883px × 1326px
Photo credit: © The Reading Room / Alamy / Afripics
License: Licensed
Model Released: No

Keywords: ., bookauthorsajouscharlesedemchar, bookcentury1900, bookdecade1910