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.
- Virchow, Rudolf, 1821-1902.
- Date:
- 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.
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![FAOB LECTURE III.—Physiological and Pathological Tissues 49 The higher animal tissues: muscles, nerves, vessels, blood— Muscles. Striped and smooth. Atrophy of. The contractile substance and contractility in general. Cutis anserina and arrectores pilorum.—Vessels. Capillaries. Contractile vessels. Nerves.—Pathological tissues (Neo- plasms), and their classification. Import of vascularity. Doctrine of specific elements. Physiological types (reproduction). Heterology (heterotopy, heterochrony, heterometry) and malignity. Hypertrophy and hyperplasy. Degeneration. Criteria for prognosis.—Law of con- tinuity. Histological substitution and equivalents. Physiological and pathological substitution. LECTURE IV.—Nutrition and its Channels . . .72 Action of the vessels. Eelations between vessels and tissues. Liver. Brain. Muscular coat of the stomach. Cartilage. Bone.—Dependence of tissues upon vessels. Metastases. Vascular territories [Gefässter- ritorien] (vascular unities). Conveyance of nutriment in the juice- conveying canals (Saftkanäle) of the tissues. Bone. Teeth. Pibro- cartilage. Cornea. Semilunar cartilages. LECTURE V.—Nutrition, and Conveyance of the Nutritive Juices 89 Tendons. Cornea. Umbilical cord—Elastic tissue. Corium—Loose connective tissue. Tunica dartos.—Importance of cells in the special distribution of the nutritive juices. LECTURE VI.—Nutrition and Circulation . • 109 Arteries. Capillaries. Continuity of their membrane. Its porosity. Hemorrhage by transudation (per diapedesin). Veins. Vessels during pregnancy .-Properties of the walls of vessels: 1. Contractility. Ehythmical movement. Active or irritative hyperemia. Ischemia. Counter-irritants. 2. Elasticity and its importauce as regards the rapidity and uniformity of the current of blood. Dilatation of the ves els 3. Permeability. Diffusion. Specific affinities. Eelation between the supply of blood and nutrition Glandular secretion (liver). Specific action of the elements of tissues.-Dyscrasia. Its transitory character and local origin. Dyscrasia of drunkards. He- morrhagic diathesis. Syphilis. LECTURE VII.—The Blood v\hr\no Its fibrille. Compared with mucus, and connective tissue. S^~rSiäon.-Bed blood-corpuscles. Their nudeus and contents Changes of form. Blood-crystals (Heinaoidme, Hemme, tion. Structure. Compared with pus-corpuscles, agglutination. Specific gravity. Crusta granulosa. Diagnosis beU een pus-, and colourless blood-corpuscles. ] 84](https://iiif.wellcomecollection.org/image/b20418310_0028.jp2/full/800%2C/0/default.jpg)