PHYSIOLOGY OF THE LIVER AND SPLEEN. 739 



to this slow movement, Roy* has shown that there is a rhythmical 

 contraction and relaxation of the organ, occurring in cats and dogs 

 at intervals of about one minute. Roy supposes that these con- 

 tractions are effected through the intrinsic musculature of the organ, 

 that is, the plain muscle tissue present in the capsule and trabecular, 

 and he believes that the contractions serve to keep up a circulation 

 through the spleen and to make its vascular supply more or less 

 independent of variations in general arterial pressure. The fact 

 that there is a special local arrangement for maintaining its cir- 

 culation makes the spleen unique among the organs of the body, but 

 no light is thrown upon the nature of the function fulfilled. The 

 spleen is supplied richly with motor nerve fibers which when stimu- 

 lated either directly or reflexly cause the organ to diminish in 

 volume. According to Schaefer,* these fibers are contained in the 

 splanchnic nerves, which carry also inhibitory fibers whose stimu- 

 lation produces a dilatation of the spleen. 



The chemical composition of the spleen is complicated, but sug- 

 gestive. Its mineral constituents are characterized by a large 

 percentage of iron, which seems to be present as an organic compound 

 of some kind. Analysis shows also the presence of a number of fatty 

 acids, fats, cholesterin, and, what is perhaps more noteworthy, a 

 number of nitrogenous extractives belonging to the group of purin 

 bases, such as xanthin, hypoxanthin, adenin, guanin, and uric acid. 

 The presence of these bodies seems to indicate that active metabolic 

 changes of some kind occur in the spleen. As to the theories of the 

 splenic functions, the following may be mentioned: (1) The spleen 

 has been supposed to give rise to new red corpuscles. This it un- 

 doubtedly does during fetal life and shortly after birth, and in some 

 animals throughout life, but there is no reliable evidence that the 

 function is retained in adult life in man or in most of the mammals. 

 (2) It has been supposed' to be an organ for the destruction of red 

 corpuscles. This view is founded chiefly on microscopical evidence 

 according to which certain large ameboid cells in the spleen ingest 

 and destroy the old red corpuscles, and partly upon the fact that the 

 spleen tissue seems to be rich in an iron-containing compound. This 

 theory can not be considered at present as satisfactorily demon- 

 strated. (3) It has been suggested that the spleen is concerned in 

 the production of uric acid. This substance is found in the spleen, 

 as stated above, and it has been shown by Horbaczewsky that the 

 spleen contains a substance from which uric acid or xanthin may 

 readily be formed ; but further investigation has shown that the same 

 substance is found in lymphoid tissue generally. If, therefore, uric 

 acid is produced in the spleen, it probably originates in the large 



* "Journal of Physiology," 3, 203, 1881. 

 t "Journal of Physiology," 20, 1, 1896. 



