422 INDEX TO 
Jones, Wharton (continued) : 
contractility of veins in mouse and bat, 222 
(footnote). : 
effect of arterial contraction in producing 
accumulation and stagnation of corpuscles in 
capillaries, 225 (footnote). og he 
adhesion of red corpuscles after application of 
salt solution, 226. 
increased adhesiveness of white corpuscles 
resulting from irritation, 237 (footnote). _ 
aggregation of red discs in vessels of bat’s wing, 
239 (footnote). 
Jugular vein. See Vein. at 
Junker’s inhaler: for chloroform administration, 
106, 167. 
Keith, Thomas: on ether as compared with chloro- 
form in ovariotomy, 154. 
Kidney: disturbance of, caused by irritation of 
urethra, 401. 
Kidneys: good effect of heat applied to back in 
inflammatory congestion of, 401. 
Kirk, of Glasgow: danger of partial anaesthesia, 166. 
Knee: inflammation of, relieved by hot fomenta- 
tions, 403. 
Knee, housemaid’s: cured by introduction of 
drainage tube into, 405. 
caused by stimulation of nervous system by 
fluid, 406. 
Knee-joint: gelatinous degeneration of synovial 
membrane of, treated by free antiseptic in- 
cision and gouging, 410. 
Koch, Robert : his work on minute organisms, 387. 
method of staining Bacillus anthracis, 388. 
experiments on toxic infection with products of 
putrefaction and diphtheria, 388. 
demonstrations of effects of organisms 
diseased tissues, 399. 
KXOlliker: his discovery of cellular constitution of 
plain muscular tissue, I. 
on muscular fibre-cells, 3, 15. 
on sphincter and dilator of pupil, 4. 
on muscular apparatus of skin, 9. 
his explanation of cutis anserina, 9. 
‘knotty swellings’ in muscular fibre-cells, 19. 
his measurements of muscular fibres in pig’s 
intestine, 21. 
his statement that fibres of nerve roots become 
smaller in passing inwards through columnar 
region, 104. 
Kupfer and Ludwig: observations that splanch- 
nic nerves lose inhibitory action some time 
after death, and acquire a motor power over 
intestine, 95. 
on 
LACTEAL FLUID, FLOW OF, IN MESENTERY 
OF MOUSE (1857), 25. 
Lacteals: experiments as to absorption of solid 
particles by, 25. 
Lactic ferment: killed by bacterium lactis and other 
ferments, 346. 
author’s method of experimenting on, 354. 
eilects produced by, in milk, 361. 
rarity of, in air, 363. 
scarce in ordinary water, 364; 
proof of this, 364. 
actic acid fermentation, in milk: produced by 
organisms, 324. 
process of, 341. 
experimental 
VOLUME I 
Lactic acid fermentation, in milk (continued) : 
Miller on, 341. 
bacteria and, 342. 
produced only by Bacterium lactis, 343. 
unboiled milk not spontaneously prone to, 344. 
and Bacterium lactis, 347. 
two kinds of bacteria in, 369. 
oxygen and, 382. 
See also Fermentation. 
LACTIC FERMENTATION AND ITS BEAR- 
INGS ON PATHOLOGY (1878), 353. 
consists of insoluble particles, 375. 
experimental proof that it is caused by Bacterium 
lactis, 373. 
caused in ordinary circumstances by Bacterium 
lactis, 370. 
caused in one instance by a different bacterium, 
376 (footnote). 
a catalytic process, 381. 
Landois, Leonard: tracing of blood stream on 
paper, 181 (footnote). 
Laryngeal obstruction in chloroform administra- 
tion, 150. 
Laryngeal stertorous breathing, 144. 
caused by vibration of mucous membrane on 
orifices of arytaenoid cartilages, 145. 
Larynx: closure of, different ways in which it may 
be caused, 146 (footnote). 
Leptothrix: filaments in urine exposed to air, 280, 
282. 
Liebig : crystallization of supersaturated solution 
of sulphate of soda, 196. 
action of emulsin on amygdalin, 339. 
advocate of doctrine of chemical ferments, 339. 
alcoholic fermentation of sugar, 379. 
catalysis in fermentation, 380 (footnote). 
LIGATURE OF BRACHIAL ARTERY ILLUS- 
TRATING PERSISTENT ViIbAbiTye On 
TISSUES (1858), 85. 
Liquor sanguinis: does not coagulate, per se 
under influence of ordinary matter, 129. 
pure, indistinguishable from dropsical effusions 
and hydrocele fluid, 130. 
its relation to inflamed tissues, 244. 
exudation of, in inflammation, 269. 
Lister, Joseph Jackson: formation of rouleaux of 
red blood corpuscles, 212. 
Lithotomy: cause of rigor on passage of urine 
through urethra, 401. 
Living tissues. See Tissues. 
Lungs, congestion of: produced by carbonic acid 
gas in asphyxia, 257, 271. 
Lymph, coagulation of: in inflamed parts, 83, 244. 
Lymph, exudation of, resulting from post-mortem 
inflammation (produced by ammonia), 83. 
Lymph: (fibrine of effused liquor sanguinis) 
coagulation of, 78, 79. 
Mackenzie, Richard: case of death after putting 
up of fractured radius without chloroform, 139. 
Malignant pustule. See Pustule. 
Mammae: arrangement of muscular tissue in 
areola of, 10. 
Mammalian circulation: effects of irritants on, 211. 
Mammary gland. See Breast. 
Marey, I. J.: his experiment on secondary arterial 
contraction, 233. 
Matter, ‘colloidal’: changes of, from soluble to 
insoluble state (Graham), 129. 
