The origin of disease : especially of disease resulting from intrinsic as opposed to extrinsic causes : with chapters on diagnosis, prognosis, and treatment . ration of the Muscular Fibres of the Heart, (x 240.) From a negro man of thirty years who died of organic disease of the heart. ;;/ de-notes portions of muscular fibres which are somewhat granular in appearance ; other fibresare hollowed out and changed so that if they were by themselves it would be impossible torecognize them as muscle, e and f denote hollow fibres whose contents appear like dis-integrated blood, being composed of granu
The origin of disease : especially of disease resulting from intrinsic as opposed to extrinsic causes : with chapters on diagnosis, prognosis, and treatment . ration of the Muscular Fibres of the Heart, (x 240.) From a negro man of thirty years who died of organic disease of the heart. ;;/ de-notes portions of muscular fibres which are somewhat granular in appearance ; other fibresare hollowed out and changed so that if they were by themselves it would be impossible torecognize them as muscle, e and f denote hollow fibres whose contents appear like dis-integrated blood, being composed of granular material and circular or partly circularbodies like degenerated red blood-corpuscles, c is a fibre with thin fibrous-looking wallsand a large central cavity partly filled with debris. At the lower end of c the semicircleformed by the inturning of the walls appears to form a partition in the cavity ; above isan elliptical opening looking like a capillary cut across. The conditions suggest a minuteaneurism, the blood having entered by the elliptical opening and torn away the whole ofthe centre of the fibre to form a cavity for itself. Fig. 53 Fig. 56. ? sp> ITlJBi Pill* zr? ctt-- r ~r-f- ^57
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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1900, booksubjec, booksubjectpathology