240 BACTERIOLOGY. 



section, if the abscesses are very numerous, small, darkly 

 stained areas which range in size from that of a pin- 

 point up to those having a diameter of from 1 to 2 mm. 

 These points, when in the kidney, may be round or oval 

 in outline, or may appear wedge-shaped, with the base 

 of the wedge toward the surface of the organ. The 

 differences in shape depend frequently upon the direc- 

 tion in which the section has been made through the 

 kidney. In the muscles they are irregularly round or 

 oval. 



When quite small they appear to the naked eye as 

 simple, round or oval, darkly stained points, but when 

 they are more advanced a pale centre can usually be 

 made out. 



When magnified, they appear in the earliest stages 

 as minute aggregations of small cells, the nuclei of 

 which stain intensely. Almost always there can be 

 seen about the centre of these cell-accumulations evi- 

 dences of progressing necrosis. The normal structure 

 of the cells of the tissue will be more or less destroyed ; 

 there will be seen a granular condition due to cell-frag- 

 mentation ; at different points about the centre of this 

 area the tissue will appear cloudy and the tissue-cells 

 will not stain readily. All about and through this spot 

 will be seen the nuclei of pus-cells, many of which are 

 undergoing disintegration. In the smallest of these 

 beginning abscesses the staphylococci are to be seen 

 scattered about the centre of the necrotic tissue, but in 

 a more advanced stage they are commonly seen massed 

 together in very large numbers in the form commonly 

 referred to as emboli of micrococd. 



The localized necrosis of the tissues which is seen at 

 the centre of the abscess is the direct result of the 



