The laws and mechanics of circulation, with the principle involved in animal movement . Fig. 65.—Vertical Section of the Human Gastric Mucous Membrane, a, ridges ; 6, peptic glands.— Fig. 66.—Peptic Glands from the Human Stomach after Treatment with Alkalies.— Frey. order to maintain secretion in correspondence with the amountof ingesta it calls for appropriate arrangements in the capillarynetwork to the gastric glands, for increasing the blood supply, 200 PHYSIOLOGICAL ANATOMY. which ebbs and flows with digestion, and in correspondencewith this being increased the moment that food is in


The laws and mechanics of circulation, with the principle involved in animal movement . Fig. 65.—Vertical Section of the Human Gastric Mucous Membrane, a, ridges ; 6, peptic glands.— Fig. 66.—Peptic Glands from the Human Stomach after Treatment with Alkalies.— Frey. order to maintain secretion in correspondence with the amountof ingesta it calls for appropriate arrangements in the capillarynetwork to the gastric glands, for increasing the blood supply, 200 PHYSIOLOGICAL ANATOMY. which ebbs and flows with digestion, and in correspondencewith this being increased the moment that food is introduced,diminishing as it passes out of the cavity, and lowest duringthe interim. The vascular turgescence which the stimulus of the food pro-duces in the gastric mucous membrane (previously pale) hasforcible illustration in injected preparations (Fig. 07, A B);but in order to fully understand the mechanics, it will benecessary to go a little deeper in the tissues passing throughand through the membrane, for the purpose of getting at thenetwork between the tubes as well, as also to obtain a view ofthe relations which they sustain to the arterial and venoussystems, or the affer


Size: 991px × 2523px
Photo credit: © The Reading Room / Alamy / Afripics
License: Licensed
Model Released: No

Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookde, booksubjectblood, booksubjectrespiration