. General surgical pathology and therapeutics, in fifty lectures : a textbook for students and physicians. Central osteosarcoma of the ulna, from the collectionof the surgical clinic of the University at Berlin. Section of Fig. 140. by perfectly black and also by perfectly white secondary tumors. Sar-comata of the lungs are almost always of the granulation variety. In 622 TUMORS. the liver I have seen secondary, very beautifully pigmented, spindle-celled sarcomata; the forms of primary and secondary sarcomata thusvary greatly. Topography of sarcoma. As the above general remarks are in-sufficie
. General surgical pathology and therapeutics, in fifty lectures : a textbook for students and physicians. Central osteosarcoma of the ulna, from the collectionof the surgical clinic of the University at Berlin. Section of Fig. 140. by perfectly black and also by perfectly white secondary tumors. Sar-comata of the lungs are almost always of the granulation variety. In 622 TUMORS. the liver I have seen secondary, very beautifully pigmented, spindle-celled sarcomata; the forms of primary and secondary sarcomata thusvary greatly. Topography of sarcoma. As the above general remarks are in-sufficient for practice, we must study more accurately different forirsof sarcoma in certain tissues and in certain parts of the body. Sarcomata occur quite often in hollow bones (myeloid tumors orcentral osteosarcoma), usually in the form of giant-celled sarcoma ;they especially attack the lower jaw, next the tibia, radius, and ulna(Figs. 140 and 141). These tumors often contain mucous cysts andspherical or branched osseous formations; they are circumscribednodules, mostly forming in the medullary cavity, wh
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