. Manual of antenatal pathology and hygiene : the foetus. The umbilicalarteries, in their curved course from their origin in the internaliliacs to the anterior abdominal wall, lie entirely aliove the plane ofthe brim; they ai-e so large in the fietus as to look like direct con-tinuations of the internal iliacs, even of the common iliacs; in theirabdominal part thej are commonly called hypogastiic arteries, andin their funic part, umbilical; the portion of each hypogastric wliichremains pervious after the readjustment changes of , is thesuperior vesical artery. The Region of the Pelvis.


. Manual of antenatal pathology and hygiene : the foetus. The umbilicalarteries, in their curved course from their origin in the internaliliacs to the anterior abdominal wall, lie entirely aliove the plane ofthe brim; they ai-e so large in the fietus as to look like direct con-tinuations of the internal iliacs, even of the common iliacs; in theirabdominal part thej are commonly called hypogastiic arteries, andin their funic part, umbilical; the portion of each hypogastric wliichremains pervious after the readjustment changes of , is thesuperior vesical artery. The Region of the Pelvis. The region of the jielvis (Plates VIII. and IX.) is comparativelypoorly develojied in the full-time fictus. It has been already notedthat the bladder is an abdominal, not a jielvic, organ at this time oflife, and the same statement has now to be made about the uterus, theFallojiian tubes, and ovaries; the reason is that the pelvis is not yetcapacious enough to contain all the structures which afterwards liewithin it. Plate ix third coccygeal


Size: 2403px × 1040px
Photo credit: © The Reading Room / Alamy / Afripics
License: Licensed
Model Released: No

Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1900, bookpublishernewyo, bookyear1902