6 QUATERCENTENARY STUDIES IN PATHOLOGY 



the pancreas,* and quotes Lortet and Vialleton's explanation of this 

 supposed fact, viz., the female lays eggs where they may find an exit 

 from the body of its host. Prof. Looss states that Goebel has found the 

 ova in the pancreas.f 



I venture to intercalate the remark in this place that I have twice 

 found living worms in the pulmonary blood, one of these observations 



Fig. 2.— Serous surface of ileum, showing fibrous masses of various sizes. 



was published in the Lancet (1905, Vol. I., p. 22), the other is still 

 unpublished. The reason the worms have not hitherto been found in 



* Virchow's Archiv, 1899, clii., p. 474. 



t Mense's Handbuch der Tropenkrankheiten, 1905, Vol. I., p. 96. 



(44) 



