. Clinical gyncology, medical and surgical. whose outerends are closed. As already said, such closures may disappear by resolution;but if the closure remains, the ampulla of the tube is converted into a sacor cyst. Firm and lasting closure may take place in any kind of chronicsalpingitis, the changes in form which such tubes undergo being moststriking. (See Plates I., II., III., IV.) Pyosalpinx.—The most common is the pus-sac, or is merely a tube whose walls show interstitial inflammation, and whoseouter and perhaps inner end is closed, the closure of the outer being theresult ei


. Clinical gyncology, medical and surgical. whose outerends are closed. As already said, such closures may disappear by resolution;but if the closure remains, the ampulla of the tube is converted into a sacor cyst. Firm and lasting closure may take place in any kind of chronicsalpingitis, the changes in form which such tubes undergo being moststriking. (See Plates I., II., III., IV.) Pyosalpinx.—The most common is the pus-sac, or is merely a tube whose walls show interstitial inflammation, and whoseouter and perhaps inner end is closed, the closure of the outer being theresult either of agglutination of the fimbria? (the common condition), or offixation of this end against the ovary or some adjacent structure; the con-traction of the inner end being the result of inflammatory adhesion of theopposed inner surfaces of the tube, this closure being most common nearthe cornua, but possible at any point of the narrower stretches of the contractions in question account for the retention of secretions and ex-. Plate II.


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