INDEX. 



185 ; in blood obtained by venaesec- 

 tion, 186-187; diagnosis of, from pus- 

 corpuscles, 188, 527 ; increase in 

 number of, almost constantly accom- 

 panying hyperinosis, 199 ; increase of, 

 in leucocytosis and leukaemia due to 

 affection of lymphatic glands, 201, 

 204, '222, and of spleen, 204 ; increase 

 of, in scrofulosis, 226 ; in cancer (with 

 affection of glands), typhoid fever and 

 malignant erysipelas, 226. 



Blood-Crystals, 174-179. 



Body, the, as a social organization, 40. 



Boerhaave, on inflammation, 428. 



Bohm, on retention of fat in intestinal 

 villi, in cholera, 369. 



Bone, organic basis of, not cartilage, 96, 

 475 ; epithelium in, 96 ; found in skin 

 of many animals, where in man con- 

 nective tissue, 101 ; vessels of, 108- 

 112; structure of, 109-112; nutrition 

 of, 115 ; formation of real, in arteries, 

 403-404 ; development of, different 

 processes concerned in, 450-485 ; 

 growth of, in length and thickness, 

 451-452; fresh and living, contrasted 

 with macerated, 453 ; formation of, 

 from cartilage, 455-456, 459-461 ; 

 caries and neerosis of, 462-464 ; lique- 

 faction of, 464, 496 ; territories of, 42, 

 462-464, 481 ; granulation of, 465-466 ; 

 suppuration of, 465-466 ; formation of, 

 out of medullary tissue, 466-467 ; for- 

 mation of, out of periosteum (connec- 

 tive tissue) 467-470, pathological, 472- 

 475; development of, in rickets, 476- 

 482 ; new formation of (callus) after 

 fracture, 482-485. 



Bone-Corpuscles (cells), 109-112; real 

 nucleated cells, 111-112; indirect ori- 

 gin of (through marrow-cells) from 

 cartilage-cells, 457 ; direct formation 

 of, from cartilage-cells. 458-561 ; ter- 

 ritories of (in bone formed out of 

 cartilage) correspond to capsules of 

 cartilage-cells out of which formed, 

 462-463 ; limits of territories of, well 

 ..larked in caries, and necrosis, 462- 

 464; formation of, from marrow-cells, 

 466-467 ; from periosteal (connective- 

 tissue) corpuscles, 469, 474-475 ; form- 

 ation of, out of cartilage-corpuscles, in 

 rickets, 479-481. 



Bone- (cell) territories. See Cell-territo- 

 ries, and Bone. 



Bone-cells. See Bone-corpuscles. 



Bones, of considerable size, real organs, 

 57 ; distortions of, in rickets, 477-478 ; 

 see Long Bones. 



Bouchut, on pyaemia (leukaemia) in puer- 

 peral fever, 223. 



Bowman, Mr. his sarcous elements, 82- 

 on circulation in kidney, 424. 



Brady-fibrine, 193. 



Brain, hair in, 95 ; substitution, in ven 

 tricles, of simple, scaly epithelium for 

 ciliated, 100 ; sudden occlusion of ves- 

 sels in, 244 ; yellow softening of, 

 merely fatty degeneration, 388 ; im- 

 port of pigment-cells in, 388 ; solitary 

 tubercles of, 523-524 ; see Cerebrum. 



Bright's disease of the kidney, 335 ; 

 389-390; 392; large proportion of 

 cases of, due to amyloid degeneration, 

 422 ; three forms of (parenchymatous 

 nephritis, amyloid degeneration, inter- 

 stitial nephritis), 424, possible coexist- 

 ence of two, or all three of them, 424. 



Brood-cavities (physalides) 444-445. 



Broussais, on inflammation, 428, 429. 



Brown, Robert, on nuclei of vegetable 

 cells, 32. 



Brown-Sequard, 420. 



Briicke, 80 ; on optical properties of 

 different constituents of primitive 

 fasciculi of muscle, 82; on striated 

 border of cylindrical epithelium of in- 

 testinal villi, 367 ; on muscular fibres 

 of intestinal villi, 367. 



Bubo, syphilitic, seat of virus in, 221. 



Buffy coat, 18ti ; in inflammations of 

 respiratory organs (pneumonia, pleu- 

 risy), 193; due to presence offibrino- 

 genous substance in blood, 194. 



Calcareous metastases, 248-249. 



Calcareous salts, 170; metastases of, 

 248-249-. 



Calcification, of arteries (petrifaction), 

 its course described, 407 ; distinction 

 between, and ossification, 407 ; of car- 

 tilage, 455, 458-46O; irregularity of, 

 in rickety bones, 476. 



'Callus, formation of, 482-485. 



Canaliculi of Bone, 111; cannot be in- 

 jected from Haversian canals, 115 ; 

 no real existence in living bone, in 

 which completely filled up by pro- 

 cesses of bone-cells, 461. 



Canaliculi chalicophori, 111 



Canaliculi of teeth, 115. 



Cancer, supposed specific nature of, 90 , 

 existence of physiological type for, 

 91, cf. 529 ; lymphatic glands in, 221 ; 

 rapidity of propagation of, dependent 

 upon greater or less abundance of 

 parenchymatous juices in, 252, 530; 

 two possible modes of propagation of, 

 252 ; its metastases follow direction of 

 secreting organs, 253, cf. 5U5 ; propa- 

 gation of, probably due to certain 

 fluids, 253; irregularity observed in 



