Volume 1
A compendium of human & comparative pathological anatomy / By Adolph Wilhelm Otto. Translated from the German with additional notes and references, by John F. South.
- Adolph Wilhelm Otto
- Date:
- 1831
Licence: Public Domain Mark
Credit: A compendium of human & comparative pathological anatomy / By Adolph Wilhelm Otto. Translated from the German with additional notes and references, by John F. South. Source: Wellcome Collection.
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![the fluid fibrous matter of the blood is poured out as a thin layer between the wounded surfaces, at first glues them together, by ADHESION or per primam intentionem, and subsequently heals them, when the exuded layer becomes organized and con- tains new blood-vessels, which open into the vessels of the wounded surfaces ; in a similar way also can soft and hard parts, which have been completely separated from the body, and even a part of a foreign organism, be made to adhere. In cases of restoration there may also be formed on the wound, from the effused fibrous matter, little, soft, reddish, and cornlike congelations, called GRANULATIONS or FLESHY FUNGUSES,” which run together with the adjoining membrane into a kind of skin, are converted into cellular tissue, possess many fine blood-vessels, and whilst recent, continue to produce fleshy substances uniting in layers, until the cavity is filled up and the divided parts are united, upon which, then, finally a new skin is produced; this at first is very vascular and red, but gradually becomes white, expanded, often also some- what thicker, or descends and becomes at the same time tendinous, and is called a scar, cecatrix. The granu- lations may rise too luxuriantly above the surface of the neighbouring parts, and are then very spongy and easily bleed, whenée arises their name PROUD FLESH, caro luxurians, Jungosa, hypersarcosis. (1) Tagliacozzi De curtorum chirurgia per insitionem. Venet. 1597.—Fabre Mém. de l’Acad. de Chir. Vol. IV. p. 74.—Louis p. 106.—Bezoet D. de modo, quo natura solutum reintegr. 4to. J. B. 1763, in Sandifort’s Thesaur. Diss. Vol. III. p. 149.—yting De Consolidatione vulnerum cum deperditione sub- stantie. Argent. 1770.—Murray Comm. de reintegratione part. corp. animal. 4to. Gotting. 1781.— Haeberle Beantwortung de Preisfrage, welche geschnittene und gehauene Wunden sollen durch Vereinigung und welche durch Eiterung. geheilt werden? 8vo. Wien, 1781.—Domeier D. de viribus nature medicatricis in reparandis et coadunandis partibus corp. human. abscissis. Gott. 1784.— Hahn D. de regeneratione partium mollium in vulnere. 4to. Gott. 1787.—J. Moore, On the process of nature in the healing of Wounds. Lond. 1789.— White, On the Regeneration of Animal Substances, in Mem. of the Soc. of Manchester, Vol I.—Hoorn De iis, que in partibus membri, presertim osseis, amputatione vulnerati, notanda sunt. L. B. 1803.— Baronio Degli Innesti animali. 8vo. Milano. 1804.—Eggers Von der Wiedererzeugung. 8vo. Leipz. 1821.—E. A. Carus D. de vi nature medicatrice in formandis cicatricibus. Part I. 8vo. Lips, 1822.—Suringar Comm. med. de modo, quo natura versatur in restituendo omni. quod in corp. hum. solutum est. 4to. L. B. 1823.— Wiesmann De coalitu par- tium a reliquo corpore prorsus disjunctarum Comm. etc. c. tab. an. 4to. Lips. 1824.—Paul Comm. physiol. chir. de vulneribus sanandis, in certam. liter. prem. ornata. 4to. Gotting. 1825. cum duob. tab. sn.—Sa/felder D. de reunione partium corp. hum. elementarium. S8vo. Jenx, 1826.—Fr. Paul Comm. phys. chir. de vulneribus sanandis, etc. 4to. Goett. 1825, c. duob. tab 2n.—[J. C. Carpue, An account of two successful Operations for restoring a lost Nose from the in- teguments of the forehead, with historical and physiological observations on the nasal operation, including descriptions of the Indian and Italian methods. 4to. Lond. 1816. — C. F'. Graeft De rhinoplastice seu arte curtum nasum ad vivum restituendi commentatio. Latine edidit J. F.C, Hecker. 4to. Berol. 1818. T.] E](https://iiif.wellcomecollection.org/image/b33489166_0001_0063.jp2/full/800%2C/0/default.jpg)


