CONTENTS. 



PAf.t 



LECTURE TILL BLOOD AND LYMPH .... 189 



Change and replacement of the constituents of the blood. Fibrine. Lymph 

 and its coagulation. Lymphatic exudation. Fibrinogenous substance. 

 Formation of the buffy coat. Lymphatic blood, hyperinosis, phlogistic 

 crasis. Local formation of fibrine. Transudation of fibrine. Forma- 

 tion of fibrine in the blood. Colourless blood-corpuscles (lymph-corpus- 

 cles). Their increase in hyperinosis and hypinosis (Erysipelas, pseudo- 

 erysipelas, typhoid fever). Leucocytosis and leukaemia. Splenic and 

 lymphatic leukaemia. The spleen and lymphatic glands as blood-making 

 organs. Structure of lymphatic glands. 



LECTURE IX. PYAEMIA AND LEUCOCYTOSIS . . .211 



Comparison between colourless blood- and pus-corpuscles. Physiological 

 reabsorption of pus ; incomplete (inspissation, cheesy transformation), 

 and complete (fatty metamorphosis, or milky transformation). Intravasa- 

 tion of pus. Pus in the lymphatic vessels. Retention of matters in the 

 lymphatic glands. Mechanical separation (nitration). Coloration by tat- 

 tooing. Chemical separation (attraction): Cancer, Syphilis. Irritation of 

 lymphatic glands, and its relation to leucocytosis. Digestive and puer- 

 peral (physiological) leucocytosis. Pathological leucocytosis (Scrofulosis, 

 typhoid fever, cancer, erysipelas). Lymphoid apparatuses: solitary and 

 Peyerian follicles of the intestines. Tonsils and follicles of the tongue. 

 Thymus. Spleen. Complete rejection of pyaemia as a dyscrasia suscep- 

 tible of demonstration morphologically. 



LECTURE X. METASTATICAL DYSCKASLE . . .230 



Pyaemia and phlebitis. Thrombosis. Puriform softening of thrombi. True 

 and false phlebitis. Purulent cysts of the heart. Einbolia. Import of 

 prolonged thrombi. Pulmonary metastases. Crumbling away of the 

 emboli. Varying character of the metastases. Endocarditis and capil- 

 lary embolia. Latent pyaemia. Infectant fluids. Diseases of the lym- 

 phatic apparatuses and secreting organs. Chemical substances in the 

 blood ; salts of silver. Arthritis. Calcareous metastases. Diffuse me- 

 tastatic processes. Ichorrhaemia. Pyaemia as a collective name. 

 Chemical dyscrasiae. Malignant tumours, especially cancer. Diffusion 

 by means of contagious parenchymatous juices. 



LECTURE XI. PIGMENTARY ELEMENTS IN THE BLOOD. 



NERVES 255 



Melanaemia. Its relation to melanotic tumours and colorations of the 

 spleen. Red blood-corpuscles. Origin. Melanic forms. Chlorosis 

 Paralysis of the respiratory substance. Toxicaemia. The nervous sys- 

 tem. Its pretended unity. Nerve-fibres. Peripheral nerves : their fas- 

 ciculi, primitive fibres, and perineurium. Axis-cylinder (electrical sub- 

 stance). Medullary substance (Myeline). Non-medullated and mednl- 

 lated fibres. Transition from the one kind to the other: hypertrophy 

 of the optic nerve. Different breadth of the fibres. Their termination* 

 Paciniau and tactile bodies. 



