A treatise on the science and practice of midwifery . Muscular Fibres of unimpregnated Uterus (After Farre.)a. Fibres united by connective fibres and elementary corpuscles. Fig. Developed Mi Gravid Uterus. (After Wagner.) by Dr. Farre2 to be the elementary form of the muscular fibres, andwhich he has traced in various intermediate states of John Williams3 believes that a great part of the muscular tissueof the uterus, rather more indeed than three-fourths of its thickness,is an integral part of the mucous membrane, analogous to the mus-cularis mucosas of th


A treatise on the science and practice of midwifery . Muscular Fibres of unimpregnated Uterus (After Farre.)a. Fibres united by connective fibres and elementary corpuscles. Fig. Developed Mi Gravid Uterus. (After Wagner.) by Dr. Farre2 to be the elementary form of the muscular fibres, andwhich he has traced in various intermediate states of John Williams3 believes that a great part of the muscular tissueof the uterus, rather more indeed than three-fourths of its thickness,is an integral part of the mucous membrane, analogous to the mus-cularis mucosas of the mucous membrane of the alimentary he describes as being separated from the rest of the musculartissue by a layer of rather loose connective tissue, containing nume-rous vessels. In early foetal life, and in the uteri of some of thelower animals, this appearance is very distinct; in the adult femaleuterus, however, it cannot be readily made out. Arrangement of the Muscular Fibres.—On examining the uterinetissue in an unimpregnated condition no definite arrangement of itsmuscular fibres can be made out, and the whole seem blended in in-extricable confusion. By observation of the


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade1870, bookidtre, booksubjectobstetrics