446 SIMPLE XaMOURS, 



out The blood-vessels, which are numerous in the capsule, are 

 tortuous in their course, peculiarly friable in their texture, and 

 usually surrounded by the medullary matter. This friability of 

 the vessels renders it very difficult to apply ligatures, as the pres- 

 sure required to arrest the haemorrhage usually breaks through 

 the easily lacerable vessels. 



When cut into, the lobes are seen to be composed of a peculiar 

 soft substance (the medullary matter), -which is easily brbken 

 and spread out with the fingers. It resembles reddish-coloured 

 brain matter, and is sometimes softer than brain. I have never 

 seen it white, as described by human pathologists ; but the tint 

 is usually clear, that is to say, there is no purulent or fibrinous 

 opacity. Masses of a peculiar looking substance are ceen in it. 

 These are yellowish, rounded bodies, similar to very small cysts, 

 and in mass resembling Indian meal or coarse porridge. This 

 matter is often found between the lobes, as well as within them. 

 In their centres the contents of the lobes are seen to be under- 

 going fatty degeneration. 



When the cancer is pressed or scraped, it yields a turbid 

 material, " cancer juice," and leaves a small quantity of fibrous 

 tissue, with nufnerous blood-vessels. This, as well as the cancer 

 juice, is formed during the growth of tlie cancer, and therefore 

 differs from the " stroma of scirrhus " by being part of the malig- 

 nant growth, and not of the tissue in which it grows. 



It was supposed at one time that the vascular system of thesa 

 cancers was either exclusively venous or artei'ial ; but it is now 

 proved, by the experiments of Lebert and others, that they 

 contain arteries, capillaries, and veins, arranged in networks of 

 varying closeness ; and it is also probable that the difficulty of 

 injecting veins in some of them is due to their being filled with, 

 cancerous matter, which stop the injection, after it has tra- 

 versed the capillaries. The vessels are very abundant, and ara 

 not only friable in structure, but defective in muscular tonicity, 

 hence their liability to bleed when the tumour ulcerates, or 

 when wounded accidentally ; and it is due to this that the name 

 fungus-haematodes has been applied. 



Medullary cancer may arise from an accidental injury, such 

 as a blow or wound. In a case of cancer of the side of thorax 

 r'.nd abdomen, the tumour arose in the cicatrix of an old 

 wound; the tumour had been present for several years, and 



