Manual of pathology : including bacteriology, the technic of postmortems, and methods of pathologic research . il-laries in the Malpighian bodies are frequently the seat of hyaline de-generation and occasionally contain hyaline thrombi. The capsule ofBowman is rarelv normal, although the increase in connective tissueis usuallv slight. Sometimes there is marked intertubular swelling,but, as a rule, the interstitial tissue contains but few cells. In some 650 SPECIAL PATHOLOGY. cases the tendency toward interstitial hemorrhage is quite marked,and in such instances numerous erythrocytes may be fou


Manual of pathology : including bacteriology, the technic of postmortems, and methods of pathologic research . il-laries in the Malpighian bodies are frequently the seat of hyaline de-generation and occasionally contain hyaline thrombi. The capsule ofBowman is rarelv normal, although the increase in connective tissueis usuallv slight. Sometimes there is marked intertubular swelling,but, as a rule, the interstitial tissue contains but few cells. In some 650 SPECIAL PATHOLOGY. cases the tendency toward interstitial hemorrhage is quite marked,and in such instances numerous erythrocytes may be found betweenthe tubules. The areas of hemorrhage are small, irregularly distributed,and never abundant. I have not been able to satisfy myself that thereis fatty degeneration of the capillaries, and think that the hemorrhageis probably due to increased arterial tension without provisional thick-ening of the capillary wall, the support of which is lessened by thedegenerative changes in the renal parenchyma; this type of the affectionis sometimes called chronic hemorrhagic parenchymatous nephritis. -r-fTSf 1-. Fig. 320.—Chronic Parenchymatous Nephritis, (i-inch objective, i-inch ocular, slightly reduced.)Tissue hardened in corrosive sublimate, infiltrated vvfith paraffin, and stained with hematoxylin and eosin. tuft, containing an unusual number of nuclei, h, b, b. Points at which there is some slight increasein the interstitial tissue. This is not, however, at any point marked, c. Tubule containing granular, degen-erating, epithelial cells, which have coalesced. In many tubules the fragmented and desquamated epithe-lial cells in all stages of granular change are to be seen. In no tubule are the epithelial cells normal or normallyarranged, d. Tubule from which all the epithelium has desquamated and been discharged. e. Blood-vessel.(Kidney from a case of tubal nephritis that terminated in death from eclampsia at the end of eleven weeksafter the appearance of the first


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