Lectures on general pathology v. 2 1889, Volume 2New Sydenham Society, 1889 |
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abnormal acid affected albumen amyloid amyloid degeneration anæmia animals appears arteries bacteria become blood blood-supply body bone calcification cancer carcinoma cartilage cause cells cellular character chemical chronic circulation coagulation connective tissue constitution course croup dead degeneration depends deposited diphtheria disease disturbance earthy salts embryonic epidermis epithelial epithelium extreme fact fatty atrophy fatty changes formation give rise glanders goitre growth hæmorrhage histological hyperæmia hypertrophy ibid increase infective tumours inflammation inflammatory influence intestine kidneys Klebs latter less lime-salts lipoma liver lungs lymph lymphatic glands malignant tumours material metabolism metastases microscopic Moreover mucosa mucous membrane muscle-fibres muscles muscular atrophy myomas necrosis necrotic nerves nervous nodules normal nutrition observed occur organs origin osseous osseous tissue osteomalacia oxygen pathological Phys physiological pigment processes production regard result sarcoma senile serous membranes skin spleen substance supply syphilis takes place tion tissue-elements transudation true tuberculosis ulcer uterus vessels Virch Virchow virus Zeitschr
Popular passages
Page 752 - consists, I can only answer with hypotheses. The simplest view appears to me undoubtedly to be that in an early stage of embryonic development more cells are produced than are required for building up the part concerned, so that there remains unappropriated a quantity of cells—it may be very few in number—which, owing to their embryonic character, are endowed with a marked capacity for proliferation.
Page 689 - On the Constitution and Local Effects of Disease of the Suprarenal Capsules,' 1855 ; Averbeck, ' Die Addison'sche Krankheit.,' 1869 ; J. Arnold, ' Virch. A.,' xxxv, p. 102 ; Vulpian, ' Compt. rend.,
Page 760 - alae nasi and eyelids, the prepuce and glans penis, and the rectum ; in addition, the external os uteri is very frequently the seat of a cancerous tumour, while that portion of the oesophagus crossed by the bronchus is more liable to cancroid than are its other parts.
Page 761 - various orifices either a prolongation of the epiblast inwards or a conjunction between it and another epithelial tube, or the like ; and during this process some slight irregularity may I think, easily happen, which would give rise to a group of superfluous epithelial
Page 673 - Grundlinien d. Path. d. Stoffwechsels,' 1874, p. 194; Kühne, ' Phys. Chemie;' Hoppe-Seyler, 'Med. ehem. Unters.,' i, p. 140, 162 ; ' Pflüg. A.,
Page 675 - phys. med. Ges.," v., p. 270 ;, 'Beitr. z. path. Chemie d. gewebsbildenden Substanzen,' 1873; Kühne,. ' Phys. Chemie,' p. 415 ; Hoppe-Seyler, ' Phys. Chem.,
Page 761 - to embryological complications, the occurrence of which is sufficiently indicated by the alteration of the epithelium at the cardia, at the pylorus, and at the junction of the portio pylorica with the fundus.
Page 761 - to injury, that is the favourite seat of cancer, but the region in which the pavement epithelium of the sinus urogenitalis coalesces with the cylindrical epithelium of Miiller's ducts, viz. the
Page 760 - The above-named localities are most of them the seat, at some stage or other of embryonic •development, of a certain complication. There occurs at the
Page 756 - may ultimately develop. Thus an extremely small and scarcely perceptible nodule of the skin or subcutaneous fat, or of a gland, may later on give rise to a bulky fibroma, lipoma, or adenoma ; an insignificant pigmented mole may become the