544: 



INDEX. 



respiratory power of red blood-corpus- 

 cles, 262. 



Humoralism, 43-44; 157; 160; 283; 

 339 ; 349-350 ; 504, 533. 



Hunter, John, on development of ves- 

 sels in pathological formations, 89 ; 

 on secretion of pus from walls of veins 

 in phlebitis, 2.31 ; his division of in- 

 flammations, 437. 



Huxley, Prof., connection between ten- 

 don and muscle, 99. 



Hydrogen, cyanuretted and arseniuret- 

 ted, their action upon respiratory sub- 

 stance of red blood-corpuscles, 262. 



Hypertemia, so-called active, vessels in, 

 in passive condition, 149-151 ; has no 

 directly regulating influence upon nu- 

 trition of tissues, 155; produced by 

 section of sympathetic in the neck, 

 156. 



Hyperinosis (increase of fibrine in blood) 

 dependent upon local inflammation 

 and not due to changes in constituents 

 of blood, 195; generally dependent 

 upon inflammation of organs well sup- 

 plied with lymphatic vessels and con- 

 nected with large masses of lymphatic 

 glands, 195 ; not met with in inflam- 

 mation of brain, 196 ; when consider- 

 able almost always accompanied by 

 increase in number of colourless blood"- 

 corpuscles, 199; in erysipelas, diffuse 

 phlegmonous (pseudo-erysipelatous) in- 

 flammation, 200-201 ; in pregnancy, 

 225. 



Hyperplasia, distinguished from Hyper- 

 trophy, 93-94, 445-446 ; contrasted 

 with Heteroplasia, 95-96 ; a rather 

 tardy process, 449. 



Hypertrophy, distinguished from Hyper- 

 plasia, 93-94 ; simple, scarcely to be 

 distinguished from results of nutritive 

 irritation, 336. 



Hypinosis (diminution of quantity of 

 fibriue in blood) in fevers of typhoid 

 class, 200. 



Hypoxanthine, in leuksemic blood, 205 ; 

 in spleen, 205. 



Ichorrhajmia, 250-251. Cf. 252, 254 

 504-505, 529-530. 



Induration, a form of (passive) degene- 

 ration, 359. 



Infection, by means of contagious juices, 

 264, 504-505. Cf. 252, 529-530. 



Inflammation, its course in previously 

 hypenemic tissues, 156 ; diffuse phleg- 

 monous, hyperinosis and leucocytosis 

 in, 200; part of what is ordinarily 

 called, included in nutritive irritation, 

 336 ; ueuro-paralytical (resulting from 



abolition of action of nerves by seo 

 tion, &c.) done away with, 351-353 ; a 

 compound of the three forms of irrita- 

 tion (functional, nutritive, formative), 

 354 (but cf. 431); no longer to be 

 considered as a real entity, 427 ; each 

 of its four cardinal symptoms (heat, 

 redness, swelling, pain) in its turn re- 

 garded as the essential one, 428-429 ; 

 irritation, starting-point in every form 

 of, 429, 430 ; cannot occur without an 

 irritating stimulus (irritament), 429 ; 

 lesion of function, an accompaniment 

 of, 430 ; in every case begins with an 

 increased absorption of matters into 

 the tissue, 431, not dependent upon 

 hypergemia, may occur both in vascu- 

 lar and non-vascular parts, 432 ; exu- 

 dation in, both mucous and tibrinous, 

 433 ; two forms to be distinguished, 

 the purely parenchymatous (where no 

 exudation) and the secretory (exuda- 

 tive), 436, occurring for the most part 

 in different organs, and the former 

 more serious than the latter, 436-437. 



Inflammatory Globules (see Granule- 

 globules), 379 ; 391. 



Inflexion, of bones, in rickets, 477. 



Infraction, of bones, in rickets, 477. 



Intercellular substances, division of, into 

 districts, territories (cell-territories), 

 40-41. 



Intermittent fever, melanaamia in, 256- 

 257 ; melanic corpuscles in blood in, 

 260 ; see Ague. 



Interstitial Xephritis, 424. 



Intestines, solitary follicles of, equiva- 

 lent to follicles" of lymphatic glands, 

 226, 227 ; nervous plexuses in sub- 

 mucous tissue of, 291-292 ; amyloid 

 degeneration of, giving rise to "defi- 

 ciency of absorption and diarrncea 

 421 ; suppuration in mucous mem- 

 brane of small, 492-493. 



Investment-theory, 63. 



Iodine, action of (alone and with sul- 

 phuric acid) on cellulose, 31, on cor- 

 pora amylacea of brain, 320 (cf. 413); 

 on cholestearine, 400 ; (alone) on amy. 

 loid prostatic concretions, 413; on 

 amyloid substance, (alone and with 

 SO*), 422, 427. 



Irritability, criterion of life, 325 ; func- 

 tional (nerves, muscles, ciliated epi- 

 thelium, glands), 327-333 ; muscular, 

 independent of nerves, 333 ; nutritive, 

 334-345. 



Irritament, definition of, 430, 431. 



Irritation, increased absorption produced 

 by, 155; influence in producing in- 

 creased nutrition, 167 ; essential for 



