Practical pathology; a manual for students and practitioners . ^J^f^M •if** ^f .: m. Fig. 60.—Section of leucocythremic liver. Stained with logwood. (X70.) Central or hepatic vein. /. Leucocytes, especially numerous at the periphery of Rows of liver cells between the capillary vessels. scattered at irregular intervals throughout the liver substance, butespecially under the capsule. ( X 450).—The infiltration around the vessels is readily made out;the capillaries are crowded, both inside and out, with the deeplystained cells, so that in many places the liver cells appear to
Practical pathology; a manual for students and practitioners . ^J^f^M •if** ^f .: m. Fig. 60.—Section of leucocythremic liver. Stained with logwood. (X70.) Central or hepatic vein. /. Leucocytes, especially numerous at the periphery of Rows of liver cells between the capillary vessels. scattered at irregular intervals throughout the liver substance, butespecially under the capsule. ( X 450).—The infiltration around the vessels is readily made out;the capillaries are crowded, both inside and out, with the deeplystained cells, so that in many places the liver cells appear to beatrophied, and even destroyed, by the pressure of the myelocytes,though otherwise they may remain unchanged. These small cells, when carefully examined, are in all respects LEUCOCYTH.^MIA 287 like the so-called wandering cells, though in many cases the nucleus hasassumed a solid instead of a lobed or polymorphous form, and aresurrounded by no stroma of any kind, though a few delicate threads ofcoagulated fibrin may sometimes be seen lying in the normal connectivetissue spa
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