Fibroids and allied tumours (myoma and adenomyoma) : their pathology, clinical features and surgical treatment . Mi^BmMi^fti I. .,114 ^-^ *-;->^.t^^ >v^^ ^ Y .^t^>». (fife tep^. Figs. 1*3, 184, 185.—Three sections from a case of salpingitis nodosa. 183 shows a largecyst which has developed from the heterotopic mucosa. 184 shows multiple ramifi-cations of complicated mucosal diverticula which explain how easily an ectopicgestation might be caused in such a condition. 185 shows epithelial budding in someof the peripheral follicles. This is extremely common in tuberculous cases and mayfo


Fibroids and allied tumours (myoma and adenomyoma) : their pathology, clinical features and surgical treatment . Mi^BmMi^fti I. .,114 ^-^ *-;->^.t^^ >v^^ ^ Y .^t^>». (fife tep^. Figs. 1*3, 184, 185.—Three sections from a case of salpingitis nodosa. 183 shows a largecyst which has developed from the heterotopic mucosa. 184 shows multiple ramifi-cations of complicated mucosal diverticula which explain how easily an ectopicgestation might be caused in such a condition. 185 shows epithelial budding in someof the peripheral follicles. This is extremely common in tuberculous cases and mayform the starting-point of a carcinoma. (After F. Jacob, Beit?-age z. Geb. u. xix. H. I, Figs. 8, 9, 10.) 312 EXTRAUTERINE ADENOMYOMA chap. the round ligament and cystic swellings of the processusvaginalis peritonei \ but, in 1903, EmanueP had collectedseventy-six true growths of the round ligament—fifteen ofthese were myomas or fibromyomas and some proved to be adenomyomas ; to the latter Emanuel added four casesof his own. This authors four cases contained cysts withcubical epithelium. He regarded the cubical epitheliumas springing from endothelium, and preferred to l


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1910, booksubjectgynecologyoperative