Manual of pathology : including bacteriology, the technic of postmortems, and methods of pathologic research . iber. B. Same containing myoclasts. C. Vcssil with swollen endothelium. D. D. Pneumococci to which the process was due. occurred in the United States. Any or all the muscles may be involved;they are swollen, red or pale yellow, sometimes streaked with gray orreddish striae, and in consistency may be tinn. or soft and boggy; hemor-rhages are occasionally present. Histologically the fibers are granular,hyaline, sometimes fragmented, and occasionally fattv. Interstitialswelling and Ivmph


Manual of pathology : including bacteriology, the technic of postmortems, and methods of pathologic research . iber. B. Same containing myoclasts. C. Vcssil with swollen endothelium. D. D. Pneumococci to which the process was due. occurred in the United States. Any or all the muscles may be involved;they are swollen, red or pale yellow, sometimes streaked with gray orreddish striae, and in consistency may be tinn. or soft and boggy; hemor-rhages are occasionally present. Histologically the fibers are granular,hyaline, sometimes fragmented, and occasionally fattv. Interstitialswelling and Ivmphoid accumulations occur; the spleen is soft and en-larged and bronchopneumonia is sometimes present. Subcutaneousedema and cuticular inflammatory changes are conspicuous clinicalfeatures of the affection. Stomatitis, with or without ulceration, andangina have been observed. In some cases the condition is accom-panied by polyneuritis. Steiner. Jour, of 1905, vol. vi, p. 407- Strong, Deut. klin. Med, 1Q04, Bd. Hit. Bauer. -Munch, med. Jan. 36. 1904. No. 4- 794 SPECIAL Parasitic myositis is a local lesion resulting from the deposit of animalparasites in the muscle; in trichinosis (p. 204) it is a polymyositis and isusually accora])anied by eosinophilia (p. 417). Chronic interstitial myositis/ also called fibrous myositis, sclerosingmyositis, myositis fibrosa, and myositis ivith contraction, is a protractedinflammation of muscle attended by the formation of fibrous tissue andprogressive atrophy of the fibers of the affected tissues. The conditionmay be primary, in which case it is called idiopathic, or, when due to trauma, ischemia, or persistent localV irritation, the lesion is spoken of as secondary interstitial myositis. Littleis known concerning the changes oc-curring in the muscles in the so-calledchronic muscular rheumatism, but insome instances the structural altera-tions represent mild grades of this pro-ductive interstitial myositis


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