Carpenter's principles of human physiology . * Klein, in Handbook for the Physiological Laboratory, 1873, p. Kolliker, Mikroskopische Anatomie, Band ii. § 171. COMPOSITION AND PROPERTIES OF CHYLE AND LYMPH. 199 researches of Teichmann* show that these bodies are never penetrated byany lacteal vessels, though their presence in the mucous membrane occasionsconsiderable disturbance in the usual arrangement of the lacteal figures on page 180 show clearly the relations which they hold tothe surrounding vessels, together with the general structure of the small(Fig. 78) and large int


Carpenter's principles of human physiology . * Klein, in Handbook for the Physiological Laboratory, 1873, p. Kolliker, Mikroskopische Anatomie, Band ii. § 171. COMPOSITION AND PROPERTIES OF CHYLE AND LYMPH. 199 researches of Teichmann* show that these bodies are never penetrated byany lacteal vessels, though their presence in the mucous membrane occasionsconsiderable disturbance in the usual arrangement of the lacteal figures on page 180 show clearly the relations which they hold tothe surrounding vessels, together with the general structure of the small(Fig. 78) and large intestine (Fig. 79). In their course through themesentery, the Lacteals pass into the bodies known as the Mesenteric Glands,which stand in the same relation to them that the Absorbent Glands ofthe body generally do to the Lymphatics. * Fig. Horizontal Section through the middle plane of three Peyerian Glands in the Rabbit,showing the distribution of the blood-vessels in the interior. 154. Composition and Properties of the Chyle and Lymph.—The chiefchemical difference between these fluids consists in the much smaller proportionof solid matter in the Lymph, and in the almost entire absence of fat, whichis an important constituent of the Chyle. Lymph is found in the lymphatic * Teichmanns investigations were chiefly made by means of injections; but His, whoexamined thin sections of the intestinal mucous membrane after merely washing them withwater and a camel-hair brush ( Untersuch. iiber den Bau der Peyerischen Driisen, Leipzig,1868, p. 7), maintains the elaborate system of vessels described by Teichmann to be onlysplits or fissures in the membrane between the follicles, traversed by fibrous cords and bands,and containing blood-vessels. At the same time he agrees with the view that they serve aschannels for the conductio


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade1880, booksubjectphysiology, bookyear1