The microscope and microscopical technology : a textbook for physicians and students / by Heinrich Frey ; translated from the German and edited by George R. Cutter, from the fourth and last German edition.
- Date:
- 1872
Licence: Public Domain Mark
Credit: The microscope and microscopical technology : a textbook for physicians and students / by Heinrich Frey ; translated from the German and edited by George R. Cutter, from the fourth and last German edition. Source: Wellcome Collection.
Provider: This material has been provided by the Royal College of Physicians of Edinburgh. The original may be consulted at the Royal College of Physicians of Edinburgh.
639/686 (page 619)
![materials. 357, 358; moveraent reproduced by dilute alkalies, 259: forms ot the movement according to rurkinje, Valentine and Engel- mann, 2(i0; obtaiiiing ciliated cells in acute catarrh of the nose and respiratory passages, 2fi0: stratified pavement, epithelium and epidermis, 2(;i; stachel .and riff cells, 2fil; action of alkalies, 262; chloride of gold, 2(i3; epithelial new formations of a patholosrical nature, 265; indurations and warts, 265; pearl-like tumors and concentric bodies of the thymus, 265. Epizoa. 567. Etiier dissolves fat and Canada balsam, 143. Eustachian tube. 609. Examination with the microscope, 87; with magnifying powers of increasing strength, 92, 93. Exostosis, 309. Exudation cylinders of the uriniferous canals in Bright's disease, 524 ; in the urine, 527. Exudations, asserted organization of, 283. Eye, site Oi'gans of Vision, 579; hypermetropic, 3 ; myopic, 3; as a camera lucida, 1; protect- ing the, 89, 07. Eyeball, 581; lids, 579. Eye-piece micrometer, 36; valuation of its di- visions, 3(i, 37; dependence of the same on the objectives, 86 ; with screw, 34; improved by Mohl, 35. Eye-pieces of the oldest compound microscopes, 7: of the improved instruments, 14 ; designa- tion according to their strength, 15 : shorten- ing with the increase in strength, 16; ordinary- negative of Huyghens, K!; positive of Rains- den, 17 ; orthoscopic of Kellner, 16. 94; ho- losteric, 16; aplanatic, 17; under corrected, 18; position of the lenses in an eye-piece, 18; use of weak eye-pieces, 93; limits of their application, 93; uselessness of very strong ones, 93, 94. P. Parrant's mounting fluid, 212. Fat emboli in the capillaries, 390. Fat tissue, 273; demonstration. 273, 274; crys- tallization of contents of cell, 274; blood- vessels of, 274; mounting, 274; new formation as lipoma, 284. Fatty acids, crystals of, in pus, 250 ; in fat cells, 274. Fatty liver, 470. Favus fungus, 566. Fermentation of pus, 250; of the urine, 529, 522; alkahne, 533. Fennentative fungus in stomach, 533; in acid urine, 532; in alkaline, 533. Ferro-cyanide of copper, 186, note ; of potash, 178, 179,184. Fibre cells, contractile—see Muscles. Fibrin, 2;i!6, assumed organization of, 283. Fibroid, consisting of connective tissue, 284, of the uterus. 547. Field, im|)ortance of shading the, 88, 98. Flakes containing blood corpuscles in the spleen, 482. Flint glass, refraction and color dispersion of, 11; lenses, 11. 52. Fluid media for microscopic preparations, 120 ; indifferent, 121-124; more active ones, 124; their optical effects, 120, 121 ; their preserva- tion by means of camphor, 124; crystalloid and colloid matters, 122; iodine-serum, 124. Follicular chains of the ovary, of Ffliigei', 543. Follicular tumors of the skin, 564. Food, remains of, in saliva, 423: in vomited matters, 431, 432: in smaU intestuies, 451, 452; in feeces, 452, 453. Forceps, 109. Forked cells of the lingual papillfe, 571. Foi-mic acid in combination with glycerine, re- commended by Banvier as a mounting fluid, 211. Forster isolates bone corpuscles with strong mineral acids, 293. Fovea centralis of the retina, 607. Freezing method for obtaining fine sections, 168. Frerichs on liver diseases, 469. Frey, testing lenses, 71; recommends anilin red for tingeing, 155: and for the axis cylinder, 334; anilin blue, 156; hsematoxylin, 158; cold flowing injection mixtures, 181, 185; carmine for injections, 181; sulphate of bary- ta, 177, 185; directions for a watery Pnis- sian blue for injecting glandular canals, 186, note; very dilute acetic acid for muscular nerves, 134, 363 ; on biliary capillaries, 464; on absence of lymphatics in the thymus, 502; on lymphatics of the trachoma glands, 580 ; on injections of the ui'iniferous canals, 516. Frustulia Saxonica as a test object, 65. Fuchsin—see Anilin Red. Fiihrer recommended chloride of iron for hard- ening spleen, 139. G. Ganglion cells—see Nervous System ; layer of, of the retina, 596, 603. Gas chamber of Strieker, 104. Gastric carcinoma (false), 431. Gastric glands, 426, 429. Gegenbaur's osteoblasts, 303. Gelatine as an injection mass, 171; with glyce- rine, 211; varieties of, 171. Gelatinous tissue. 269; vitreous body, 269; enamel organ, 270; new formations, myxoma, 284. Generation, female organs of, 539; structure of the ovary, its stroma and follicles, 539, 540; the ovum, 540; its constituents and the methods for its investigation, 540, 541; the germ, 542 ; development of the follicle, 543 ; rupture of the follicle, 544; formation of the corpus luteum, 545: crystals of hagmatoidine in it, 545; pathological conditions of the ovary. 545, 546 : ovariiil cysts, 545; with .the structure of the skin, 546; oviducts, 546; ute- rus, 546 : mucous membrane and glands. 546; muscular portion, 546; pathological conditions of the uterus, 547; fibroid tumors, polypi and carcinomata, 547; vagina and external genitals, 547; secretion of the cervix uteri, 548: vaginal mucus, 548; Trichomonas vaginalis, 548; menstrual lilood. 549; lochial secretion, 549; lacteal glands, 550; develop- ment, 550 ; pathological conditions, 551: cysts and adenoid tumors, 551 ; methods of examining the organ, 551; milk, 551; colos- trum corpuscles, 552; methods of examining the milk, 552. Generation, male organs of, .5,53; testicles, seminas canalicules, corpus Highmori, epididy- mis, .553; blood-vessels, 553; lymphatics, 554; pathological new formation of the testicle, 555; methods of injection and examination, 555 ; ductus ejaculatorii, 555 ; prostate, 556; its concretions, 556; Cowper's glands, 557; cavernous organs, 557; seminal filaments, 557; movements, action under reagents, 557, 558; develoi>ment, 558, 559; preserving the filaments, 559; recognition of the same in seminal stains, 559. Gerlach, photographing apparatus of, 43, 45 ; increase of magnifying ]iower by means of photography, 48; inventor of carmine tinge-](https://iiif.wellcomecollection.org/image/b21938441_0641.jp2/full/800%2C/0/default.jpg)