May be regarded as the first step of the organism toward forming new The proximate cause of all alterations of texture is an anomaly in nutrition.(2) However different the productions of this power may be when it is deranged, they are very similar in regard to their origin (1)and after a certain time, the differences in several depend either on the nature of the parts within or near which they are developed, or on external and accidental circumstances.Īll alterations of texture come from an albuminous substance which very probably is always fluid when it is effused.(2)ĭropsy, that is, the abnormal accumulation of an albuminous fluid, Placing in the organization, in the organic matter, the origin of all the physiolo Our author on this topic follows his master Reil, to whom also belongs the merit of Language, that the altered tissues change in their structure, their form, their appeara,nce, and not to resolve, or in any way to conceal, an insoluble diflBculty. To say then that an anomaly innutrition is the immediate cause of all alterations in texture, is to say, in conventional The structure, of the parts upon which it acts. Texture but this opinion is entirely unimportant, because we are totally unacquainted with the nutritive action, unless it be with the appearance, the form, and (2) The nutritive action is doubtless changed in producing every alteration of 129), in the preface to his Organozoonomie, in his Beytrage zur Physiognosie und Eautognosie, and in his Trait sur le pus et le mucus. In the Gazette médico-chirurgicale de Salzbourg (1816, vol. and Gruithuisen's researches on the essence of inflammation,
Martin's work on organic diseases in general, in the Mémoires de la société médicaleĭ'émulation, vol. Likewise the articles Anatomie pathologique, in the same collection, and in the Dictionnaire abrégé des sciences médicales, the first by Bayle, the second by Boisseau His article Anatomie pathologique, in the Dictionnaire des sciences médicales. L'anatomie pathologique, by Laennec, in the Journ. Taschenbuch der pathologischen Anatomie, Leipsic, 1820.— See also the Hôte sur Transformations et productions organiques en particulier, Paris, 1816.^ — Rayer, Sotnmaire d'une histoire abrégée de l'anatomie pathologique, Paris, 1810. Cruveilhier, Essai sur l'anatomie pathologique en général, et sur les Otto, Handbuch der pathologischen Anatomie des Menschen und der Thiere. Knoblauch, Dîssertatio quÅ“ continet phænomènorum hominis Å“groti expositionem, Leipsic, 1810.
#Duplicate skeleton spine2d plus
— Pinel, La médecine clinique rendueplus précise et plus exacte par V application de V analyse, Paris.— Prost, Ld médecine éclairée par l'observation et l'ouverture des corps, Paris. clarus, Quœstiones de partibus pseudo-organicis, Leipsic, 1805. — Conradi, Handbuch der pathologischen Anatomie, Hanover, 1796. (1) Besides the treatises on patholog-ical anatomy which have been before mentioned, consult Ludwig, Primæ lineœ anatomiœ pathological Leipsic, 1785. The calculi are developed by the second mode to the first belong all other formations, whether primitively connected in their organization with parts already formed, or not. The accidental formations(l) are produced sometimes by a peculiar fluid effused expressly to give rise to them, sometimes by precipitation and crystalization, in accordance with the laws of chemical affinity, in a secreted fluid, the chemical composition of which is somewhat changed. Handbook of Pathological Anatomy Volume I (1812) Section XII. COMPARISON OF THE BONES IN THE DIFFERENT REGIONS OF THE BODY