. Human physiology. and cells of the stomach, a. Free ends of theepithelial particles, seen on looking down uponthe membrane, b. Nuclei visible at a deeperlevel, e. The free ends seen obliquely, d. Deepor attached ends of the same. The oval nucleiare seen near the deeper ends. From the dog.—Magnified 300 diameters. in the separation of some secretion from the blood, and, when filled,burst, like other secreting cells, and discharge their contents into thestomach.^ Dr. Neill,* from his histological examinations of the stomach, has Op. cit. 2 Sitzungsbericht. der Wiener Akad., vi. 214, and Cansta


. Human physiology. and cells of the stomach, a. Free ends of theepithelial particles, seen on looking down uponthe membrane, b. Nuclei visible at a deeperlevel, e. The free ends seen obliquely, d. Deepor attached ends of the same. The oval nucleiare seen near the deeper ends. From the dog.—Magnified 300 diameters. in the separation of some secretion from the blood, and, when filled,burst, like other secreting cells, and discharge their contents into thestomach.^ Dr. Neill,* from his histological examinations of the stomach, has Op. cit. 2 Sitzungsbericht. der Wiener Akad., vi. 214, and Canstatts Jaliresbericht, 1851, , WiirzWrg, 1851. 3 Kirkes and Paget, Manual of Physiology, 2d Amer. edit., p. 167, Pliilad., 1853.* Amer. Journ. of the Med. Sciences, Jan., 1851. 86 DIGESTION. described the arrangement of tlie mucous membrane as differing essen-tially in the cardiac^middle and pyloric portions. In the first portionit is reticulated; in the last, villous; whilst the second is, so to speak, Fig.


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Keywords: ., bookauthordungliso, bookcentury1800, bookdecade1850, bookyear1856