. General physiology; an outline of the science of life. THE GENERAL CONDITIONS OF LIFE 325 ing; as a result of other transformations in the muscle the rigor passes away, this process being accompanied by muscular relaxation. A typical coagulation-necrosis in Weigert's sense occurs in muscle under pathological conditions, especially in connection with fevers, auch^ as typhoid : this is the so-called vMxy degeneration, which consists in a coagulation of the muscle-substance with loss of its cross-striation and a separation into waxy-appearing flakes (Fig. 138). Similar coagulation-processes occ


. General physiology; an outline of the science of life. THE GENERAL CONDITIONS OF LIFE 325 ing; as a result of other transformations in the muscle the rigor passes away, this process being accompanied by muscular relaxation. A typical coagulation-necrosis in Weigert's sense occurs in muscle under pathological conditions, especially in connection with fevers, auch^ as typhoid : this is the so-called vMxy degeneration, which consists in a coagulation of the muscle-substance with loss of its cross-striation and a separation into waxy-appearing flakes (Fig. 138). Similar coagulation-processes occur in other tissue- cells, especially in active inflammations of the mucous membranes, fis in pharyngeal diphtheria. Finally, among the coagulation- necroses in the wider sense there can be classed the pheno- mena of cell-death that appear when, for the purpose of. I-'IG. 130.—Liquefaction at tlie edffe of a blister caused by burning, a, Horny layer of the epi- dermis ; h, rete Malptffhii of the epidermis ; c, normal papillae of the dermis ; d, cells swollen and already partly liquefied ; e, partly normal cells ; /, liquefied mass ; (r and h, swollen cells with nuclei destroyed ; (, sunken papillfe ; k, coagulated exudation. (AJfter Ziegler.) anatomical or histological preservation, living tissue is placed in liquids that cause coagulation, such as mineral acids, alcohol, sublimate, etc. These are the most acute cases of cell-death, and for this reason these liquids are especially well-fitted for killing and preserving. By their application the living cell is killed suddenly; it thus has not time to undergo extensive change, but in a moment is fixed in a condition very similar to that of life. In a third form of necrosis, liquefaction, the tissue-cells become completely liquefied, their protoplasm disintegrating into a granular detritus and the nuclei and cell-boundaries dissolv- ing until the tissue is changed into a thickish liquid. Such softenings occur especially in the f


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