Cellular pathology : as based upon physiological and pathological histology; twenty lectures delivered in the Pathological Institute of Berlin during the months of February, March, and April, 1858 / by Rudolf Virchow; translated from the second edition of the original by Frank Chance; with notes and numerous emendations, principally from ms. notes of the author.
- Rudolf Virchow
- Date:
- MDCCCLX. [1860]
Licence: Public Domain Mark
Credit: Cellular pathology : as based upon physiological and pathological histology; twenty lectures delivered in the Pathological Institute of Berlin during the months of February, March, and April, 1858 / by Rudolf Virchow; translated from the second edition of the original by Frank Chance; with notes and numerous emendations, principally from ms. notes of the author. Source: Wellcome Collection.
Provider: This material has been provided by King’s College London. The original may be consulted at King’s College London.
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![Lymj)lmtic Vessels, connection of, witli phlogistic crasis or hyperinosis, 1G2- 1G3; introduction of pus into, 183. Lymphoid Organs, 192-19-1; diseases of, from action of infectant fluids, 211. Magnetic needle, action of nerves upon, 287. Malignity, not to be confounded with heterology, 64, 4-84. Malpighi, on fibrine, 135. Malpighian Bodies, (spleen) equivalent to follicles of Ipnphatic glands, 193 ; amyloid degeneration of, 369, 373. (kidney) deposition of silver in, 213; amyloid degeneration of, and of their afferent arteries, 379-381. Marrow, multi-nuclear cells in, 307-308; a connective tissue, 409; formed from osseous tissue, 409; ultimate product of development of bone, 409; formed from cartilage either directly, 413-415, or indirectly (through osseous tissue) 413 ; fatty, formation of, 414, normal in long bones, 414; in bo- dies of vertebra; nearly always only small cells of, without fat, 414 ; in- flammatory, 414; very close corre- spondence between, and granulations, 421; formation of osteoid tissue and bone from, 422-423; young (granu- lations) starting-point of all hetero- plastic development, 426; formation of bone oi:t of, in fractures, 440-441; undue formation of, in osteomalacia, •PPj.-4.i5; very close relation of, to pus, 445. Marrow-ceUs, throw out processes (be- come jagged) during ossification, 417, 423; transfonnation of, into bone-cor- puscles, 422-423. Maturation of Pus, consists in a soften- ing of the intercellular substance, 422. Meckel, H., on melanmmia, 221, 222; on corpora amylacea, 282; on the amyloid substance, 369, 372. Meckel, J. F., .lunr., on classification of neoplasms, 61. .Medullary Canals of bone. See Haver- sian canals. Medidlary Cancer, 464. Fungus. See Medullary Cancer, 464. Spaces, primary and secon- dary, 429 ; irregular formation of, in rickets, 433 ; excessive formation of, in osteomalacia, 4tt- H5. Tissue. .Sc(* .Marrow. .Meissner, on the two sorts of jiapillic in i skin, 240; on tactile bodies, 242 ; on nervous plexuses in submucous tis- sue of intestines, 255. Mela;na, in leuka;mia, 169. Melanromia, 220-223. Melanie corpuscles, 139 ; 224-225 ; found in intermittent fever (slight forms), cyanosis, typhoid fever, &c., 225. Membrana capsulo-pupillaris, 38. Meningitis, Tubercular, 475. Mesenteric Glands, swelling of, in ty- phoid fever, 167, 192; physiological irritation ofj producing leucocytosis, 190. Metastases (metastatic deposits), 206- 219; inlimgs, generally due to throm- bosis in peripheral veins, 206; different varieties of, dependent upon con- dition of thrombus to which due, 207, cf. 346; not unfrequently caused by endocarditis on left side of circu- lation, 208; in kidney, spleen, heart, eye and brain, 210; from infectant matters, 211; from presence of che- mical substances in blood, in gout, &c., 212-214; calcareous, 214-215; from diffusion of ichorous juices, 215, in cancer, 219, 460. Milk, formation of, 335-337. Milza nera, 222. Mitral valve, iilceration of, 208; e.x- crescences of, 363. lilollities ossium, calcareous deposits in lungs and stomach in, 214-215; in what it consists, 444-445. Morbid Growths.’ See Pathological Tissues. Morbus Brightii. See Bright’s disease. Mucin, 47-48. Mucous (Gelatinous, Colloid) Cancer,4-81. Miico us Membranes, fatty usure of, 340; suppuration in, 447-449; develop- ment of papillary tumours on, 467-468. Mucous Tissue of Umbilical Cord, 47 ; yields mucin on expression, 47; structure of, 98-100; its close re- lationship to vitreous body, 99. Mucous Tubercle, 467. Mucous Tumours. See Myxomata, 480, 486. Mucus, fibrils of com])ared with those of fibrine,136; a product of mucous mem- branes and not present in blood, 392. Mucus-Corpuscles, 22-23; development of, on surface of mucous membranes, '405-406; relation of, to pus-corpus- cles and epithelial cells, 449-450. Miillcr, Heinrich, on radiating fibres of retina, 250. .Miillcr, .Johannes, proposer of name.](https://iiif.wellcomecollection.org/image/b21308986_0533.jp2/full/800%2C/0/default.jpg)