The origin of disease : especially of disease resulting from intrinsic as opposed to extrinsic causes : with chapters on diagnosis, prognosis, and treatment . it through the capsule;but, however this may be, my experience has led me to believe that Fig. 106.—Earliest Stage of Contracted Kidney, (x 50.) From a child ten years old that died of heart disease, e and h indicate the boundariesof a fibroid area ; in it the tubules have almost disappeared, but the Malpighian bodiespersist. In the tubules to right and left of the fibroid region the epithelial cells are illdenned. The capsule is thicken


The origin of disease : especially of disease resulting from intrinsic as opposed to extrinsic causes : with chapters on diagnosis, prognosis, and treatment . it through the capsule;but, however this may be, my experience has led me to believe that Fig. 106.—Earliest Stage of Contracted Kidney, (x 50.) From a child ten years old that died of heart disease, e and h indicate the boundariesof a fibroid area ; in it the tubules have almost disappeared, but the Malpighian bodiespersist. In the tubules to right and left of the fibroid region the epithelial cells are illdenned. The capsule is thickened and shredded out, and over the fibroid area it is thick-est and dips downward. This thickening of the capsule with a dip below the general levelof the surface of the kidney and an area of fibrosis under the depression is characteristicof the beginning of contraction. Fig. 107.—Arteriole entering the Kidney from the Capsule. (X 50.) Another area from the same section as Fig. 106. v indicates the arteriole which isentering the substance of the kidney from the perirenal fat. At the point of entrancethe renal tissue is unnaturally fibroid. Fig. ill ^% 2/M


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1900, booksubjec, booksubjectpathology