General and dental pathology with special reference to etiology and pathologic anatomy; a treatise for students and practitioners . the more capable it is of regeneration, , the connec-tive tissue of an organ will always outstrip the parenchyma, ifthe latter regenerates at all. Pathologic Regeneration.—In connective tissue, the cells swelland multiply by mitosis. The new cells are round or oval withpaler nuclei than normal, and occur in great numbers; hence thetissue is said to have reverted to the embryonal type. The cells INFLAMMATION 1 09 form intercellular substance or fibrils (, t


General and dental pathology with special reference to etiology and pathologic anatomy; a treatise for students and practitioners . the more capable it is of regeneration, , the connec-tive tissue of an organ will always outstrip the parenchyma, ifthe latter regenerates at all. Pathologic Regeneration.—In connective tissue, the cells swelland multiply by mitosis. The new cells are round or oval withpaler nuclei than normal, and occur in great numbers; hence thetissue is said to have reverted to the embryonal type. The cells INFLAMMATION 1 09 form intercellular substance or fibrils (, they arc fibro-blasts) and later elongate and become relatively less numer-ous, as well as decreased in size The polymorphonuclear leu-cocytes which infiltrate inflammatory areas, do not become con-verted into connective-tissue cells, and whether other types of leu-cocytes and endothelial cells do, is undetermined, though thebudding processes of endothelial cells in the formation of newblood vessels seem to indicate the possibility of such Fig. 20.)Epithelial cells are regenerated by mitosis, and usually in ex-.


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1920, booksubjectpathology, bookyear19