CHAPTER IL 

 TriiiiMi NATIONS OP INFLAMMATION — Continued, 



filJPPURATION — ACUTE ABSCESS — ^DIFFUSE STTPPUBATION — SUPERFICIAL 



SUPPURATION COMPARISON BETWEEN MUCUS, EPITHELIUM, AND 



PUS — PYOGENIC FEVER, OR STRANGLES — PYEMIA RE-ABSORPTION 



OF PUS — FORMATION OF SINUSES ULCERATION VARIETIES AND 



TREATMENT OF ULCERS MORTIFICATION. 



The formation of pus is termed suppuraiion, and it takes place 

 in three distinct ways — (1.) circumscribed; (2.) diffused; and 

 (3.) superficial suppurations. 



As an example of the first or circumscribed form, I shall take 

 what is called an abscess or phlegmon, in -which the suppura- 

 tion is enclosed in a cavity- (as in the abscess of strangles) 

 whose walls are composed of areolar tissue. In the first stage, 

 the cells of the connective or areolar tissue are charged with 

 the material (lymph) formed by them during the first stage of 

 the inflammation; there is an enlargement of the cells, their 

 nuclei divide, and for some time multiply excessively. This 

 is soon followed by division of the cells themselves, and round 

 about the irritated or inflamed parts, where single cells formerly 

 lay, pail's or groups of cells are subsequently found, out of 

 which a new formation (connective tissue) grows. In the in- 

 terior of this growth, where the cells were at an early period 

 'abundantly filled with nuclei, numberless little cells soon ap- 

 pear, which at first still preserve the direction and forms of the 

 previous connective tissue corpuscles. 



These accumulations of little cells occur somewhat later, as 

 diffuse infiltrations of roundish masses encircled by the inter- 



