. The diagnosis of diseases of women . it wereinflammatory; second, recovery would ensue if it were genuineendometritis; third, severe hemorrhage would not occur if it wereendometritis. He, therefore, speaks of polypoid and hyperplasticor diffuse adenoma. The fallacies of his reasonings are too evidentto demand consideration. Landau tells us that the increase in the number of glands canonly occur in adenomata, and never in endometritis; while Gebhard,Ruge, and Doderlein speak of this increase in the number of theglands as characteristic of hyperplastic glandular endometritis. The conclusion is
. The diagnosis of diseases of women . it wereinflammatory; second, recovery would ensue if it were genuineendometritis; third, severe hemorrhage would not occur if it wereendometritis. He, therefore, speaks of polypoid and hyperplasticor diffuse adenoma. The fallacies of his reasonings are too evidentto demand consideration. Landau tells us that the increase in the number of glands canonly occur in adenomata, and never in endometritis; while Gebhard,Ruge, and Doderlein speak of this increase in the number of theglands as characteristic of hyperplastic glandular endometritis. The conclusion is that the two lesions cannot be clearly differ-entiated; that a connecting link exists between them. Practicallyspeaking, all are agreed that there exists a tendency on the partof inflammatory glandular growths to develop into benign andmalignant new-growths, and when occurring in old age, or when END 0 METRITIS 295 recurring after repeated curettage, they are to be regarded withsuspicion.^ Fig. 118 . Fig. 119 71?, V. / / ?1 \^ ■A V. Fig. 121 Fig. 122
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