. Diseases of the gall-bladder and bile-ducts, including gall-stones . Fig. 29.—Large Single Calculusfilling the gall-bladder. (No. 2,819, Hunterian Museum.) Fig. 30.—Calcification ofGall-bladder. (No. 2808A, Royal Collegeof Surgeons Museum.) from the retained mucus will follow. As many as 720 gall-stones were removed from the gall-bladder in Case 107, andyet that gall-bladder could not be felt as a distinct a large single gall-stone may form a hardperceptible swelling below the liver, as in Case 252, butsuch is very rare (Fig. 29). Calcified gall-bladder, which is due to c


. Diseases of the gall-bladder and bile-ducts, including gall-stones . Fig. 29.—Large Single Calculusfilling the gall-bladder. (No. 2,819, Hunterian Museum.) Fig. 30.—Calcification ofGall-bladder. (No. 2808A, Royal Collegeof Surgeons Museum.) from the retained mucus will follow. As many as 720 gall-stones were removed from the gall-bladder in Case 107, andyet that gall-bladder could not be felt as a distinct a large single gall-stone may form a hardperceptible swelling below the liver, as in Case 252, butsuch is very rare (Fig. 29). Calcified gall-bladder, which is due to cholelithic catarrh,may lead to the formation of a hard, rounded, painless TUMOURS OF THE GALL-BLADDER AND BILE-DUCTS 113 tumour, and this is evidently not very uncommon, if we may judge of its frequency by specimens in the museums (Fig. 30). Specimens Nos. 2,808 and 2,8o8a in the Royal College of


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