. Annals of surgery . Fig. I.—.\ppendi.\ and \ppendix communicatingTerminal portion of ileum. CiBcun ACTINOMYCOSIS. Fic. 2.—Low-power view of wall of abscesscavitjf showing colonies of ray fungus, i. Coloniesof actinomycosis. 2. Inflammatoo* reaction. early views of Ransom and later those of Battle and Corner * and Cope. The spread of tlie disease occurs by continuit\ of tissue and never hv the !iphatics. The abdominal . ariety frequently shows spread to the liver in the form of a portal pyaemia. The disease is seldom recog-nized in the early stages, it being mistaken for one of the commone


. Annals of surgery . Fig. I.—.\ppendi.\ and \ppendix communicatingTerminal portion of ileum. CiBcun ACTINOMYCOSIS. Fic. 2.—Low-power view of wall of abscesscavitjf showing colonies of ray fungus, i. Coloniesof actinomycosis. 2. Inflammatoo* reaction. early views of Ransom and later those of Battle and Corner * and Cope. The spread of tlie disease occurs by continuit\ of tissue and never hv the !iphatics. The abdominal . ariety frequently shows spread to the liver in the form of a portal pyaemia. The disease is seldom recog-nized in the early stages, it being mistaken for one of the commoner diseases w h i c h it so closely resembles, until, in the majority of cases, it has a firm foothold in the tissues. The diag-nosis is rendered difficult by the insidious onset and the essential chronicity of the lesions, but there are definite symptoms in each type of the disease which, when borne in mind, help toward avoiding the too common error of thinking it a case of tubercular glands, Hodgkins disease, sarcoma or cervico-facial type occurs in about eight out of ten cases, and while th


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade1880, booksubjectsurgery, bookyear1885