. Lectures on surgical pathology : delivered at the Royal College of Surgeons of England. fibrous in texture or in appearance(Figs. 59, 60). Most cartilaginoustumors, indeed, might deserve to becalled fibro-cartilaginous. It is sel-dom, and, I think, only in the firmest * These are exclusive of specimens of loose cartilages in joints ; of which, indeed, noaccoiant will be given in this lecture. f Fig. 59. Tufted, pale, filamentous tissue, with a few imbedded cartilage-cells. Froma tumor over the parotid gland. if Fig. 60. Stronger and denser fibro-cartilaginous tissue; many of the cartilaginou


. Lectures on surgical pathology : delivered at the Royal College of Surgeons of England. fibrous in texture or in appearance(Figs. 59, 60). Most cartilaginoustumors, indeed, might deserve to becalled fibro-cartilaginous. It is sel-dom, and, I think, only in the firmest * These are exclusive of specimens of loose cartilages in joints ; of which, indeed, noaccoiant will be given in this lecture. f Fig. 59. Tufted, pale, filamentous tissue, with a few imbedded cartilage-cells. Froma tumor over the parotid gland. if Fig. 60. Stronger and denser fibro-cartilaginous tissue; many of the cartilaginous cellshaving granulated nuclei. From a tumor over the parotid gland, magnified 400 times. § Fig. 61. Groups of cartilage-cells, clustered in a portion of a tumor on the phalanx ofa finger. ]\Iany of the cells are only drawn in outline ; the groups are intersected by bandsof tough fibrous tissue; some of the cells present double or triple contour-lines^ most of thenuclei are large and granular. Magnified about 400 times. II Fig. 6-2. A group of large cartilage-cells from the same ; m


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