INDEX TO 
COAGULATION OF BLOOD IN ITS PRACTI- 
CAL ASPECTS (£801)5 180: 
Coagulation of blood: causes of, on diseases of 
blood-vessels, 69. 
Richardson’s theory of, 70. See also Ammonia. 
author’s observations on, 71, 72. 
experiments on, 72, 80 (footnote), 115. 
in decomposition, 81; observations on this, 
(footnote). 
in neighbourhood of tied artery, 78. 
in contused wound, 78. 
in atheromatous degeneration of arteries, 78. 
negative influence of atmosphere on, 79. 
effect of chemical irritation of vessels on, 77. 
effect of mechanical irritation on, 80. 
produced by inflammation, 83. 
induced by introduction of solid matter into 
living vessels, 106. 
John Hunter on, 110. 
Hewson on, I10. 
Gulliver on, 110. 
theories of: mechanical (rest), 110; chemical 
(exposure to air or oxygen; escape of carbonic 
acid gas; evolution of ammonia), 110, III; 
vital: influence of living vessels in preventing 
(Astley Cooper, Thackrah, Brtcke), 111. 
vital theory and ammonia theory not neces- 
sarily inconsistent, III. 
experiments with view to corroborate ammonia 
theory as applied to b'ood outside body, 
Li2. 
experiments on, by churning with wire, 113. 
effect of exposure to foreign solid on, 115. 
effect of vacuum in promoting (Scudamore), 115, 
(Richardson), 115; experiments on, 115; effect 
of temperature on, 116. 
experiments on, 116, 117, I18. 
experiment demonstrating vital theory of, 121. 
at seat of injury of blood-vessels, 122. 
caused by walls of vessels deprived of vital 
preperties, 123. 
influence of contact with solids on, 125. 
neither oxygen nor rest has any influence on, 
1323 
summary of process, 132, 133. 
and inflammation, 133 ; experiments on this point, 
133; relation of neutral liquids (Berry Hay- 
craft’s experiments), 192. 
Freund’s observations, 192. 
uninfluenced by active living tissue, 192. 
vessels injured or impaired in vitality act like 
solid, 192. 
observations on, in feet of sheep removed by 
butcher, 192. 
blood-clot in relation to, 194. 
relation of tissues to, 242. 
in veins of amputated sheep’s foot produced by 
foreign solid substances, 241. 
takes place more slowly the later it is examined 
after death or amputation, 241 (footnote). 
See also Blood. 
Coagulation of blood in horse: 
author, 108, 180. 
Coagulation of hydrocele fluid: Buchanan’s ob- 
servations on, 129, 189; author’s experiments, 
129. 
Coagulation of lymph. See Lymph. 
Coagulation of milk, 323, 349. 
Coagulum. See Blood-clot. 
SI 
experiment by 
VOLUME I 417 
Cohn, F.: his classification of bacteria, 310. 
his statement as to non-branching of certain 
organisms, 323. 
his ‘ pigment bacterium ’, 320. 
Cold: influence of, in causing inflammation, 258. 
inflammation due to, caused through nervous 
system, 405. 
effects of, on nerves of surface exposed to it, 405; 
how it acts, 405. 
need of protecting of parts in greatest physio- 
logical activity from, 405. 
inflammation of breast produced by, during 
lactation, 407. 
‘Colloidal’ matter. See Matter. 
Congestion, inflammatory. See Inflammatory. 
Congestion of lungs in asphyxia, 257. 
produced by carbonic acid gas, 271. 
Congestions, post mortem: simulating inflamma- 
tion, 84 (and footnote), 232. 
Constriction, arterial, produced by position of 
limb, 177, 178. 
Contractile tissue of iris, observations on, I. 
Cooper, Sir Astley: experiments on effect of 
mechanical injury on coagulation of blood, 
77 (footnote). 
influence of living vessels in preventing coagula- 
tion of blood, iit. 
influence of living vessels on coagulation of blood, 
LOL: 
Cord, spinal. See Spinal. 
Corpuscles, blood: adhesiveness of, in inflamed 
parts, 83. 
influence of, on coagulation, 130. 
addition of, promotes coagulability of dropsical 
effusions, 130. 
do not act as living cells in coagulation of blood 
but by virtue of chemical material which they 
contain (Schmidt), 131. 
presence of, makes liquor sanguinis spontaneously 
coagulable, 131. 
aggregation of, in inflamed part, 212. 
agglutination of, in mammals, 212. 
in frog, 213. 
in bat, 213. 
adhesiveness of, increased by gum arabic, 215. 
diminished by acetic acid, tincture of cantha- 
rides, croton oil, almond or olive oil, 215. 
unaffected by temperature, 216 (footnote). 
no effect produced by galvanic current on, 
216; 
Corpuscles, blood, red: subsidence of, producing 
pellucid appearance in vessels before coagula- 
tion, 83. 
agglutination of, in mammals, 212. 
in frog, 213. 
in bat, 213, 230. 
aggregation caused by application of salt solution 
(Wharton Jones), 226; (Fr. Schuler in 
footnote). 
increase of adhesiveness caused by 
of mustard, 228. 
caused by chloroform, 220. 
aggregation of, produced in amputated limb by 
application of mustard, 235. 
show no adhesiveness in healthy part, 236. 
adhesiveness in inflammatory congestion never 
greater than healthy blood withdrawn from 
body, 236. 
remarkable adhesiveness of, in bat, 230. 
297 
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application 
