. Human physiology. I. A patch of Glands of the adult hu-man subject, from the lowest part of theIleum.—After Boehm. Section of Small Intestine, containing gomeof the Glands of Peyer, as shown underthe microscope. These glands appear to be small lenticular ex-cavations, containing, according to Boehra, awhite, milky, and rather thick fluid, with nu-merous round corpuscles of various sizes, butmostly smaller than blood globules. The meshesseen in the cut are the ordinary tripe-like foldsof the mucous coat. Elements of Physiology, translated by R. Willis, § 137, Lond., Denkrichrif
. Human physiology. I. A patch of Glands of the adult hu-man subject, from the lowest part of theIleum.—After Boehm. Section of Small Intestine, containing gomeof the Glands of Peyer, as shown underthe microscope. These glands appear to be small lenticular ex-cavations, containing, according to Boehra, awhite, milky, and rather thick fluid, with nu-merous round corpuscles of various sizes, butmostly smaller than blood globules. The meshesseen in the cut are the ordinary tripe-like foldsof the mucous coat. Elements of Physiology, translated by R. Willis, § 137, Lond., Denkrichriften der K. Akademie der Wissenachaft. Wien, 1850. 1 DIGESTIVE ORGANS—LARGE INTESTINE. 99 Kolliker/ Donders, and Gerlach,^ as well as the opinion of ProfessorBriicke, that they are ganglia for the elaboration of the chyle, whichpasses through them by the delicate chyliferous vessels, which origin-ate in the villi, on their way to the mesenteric ganglia; and Dr. Car-penter^ admits, that the results appear to prove q
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Keywords: ., bookauthordungliso, bookcentury1800, bookdecade1850, bookyear1856