Securing Blood from Animals 



227 



shaved, or, as is easier, the hair is pulled out, leaving a clean surface 

 an inch square. The skin is then washed with a disinfecting solu- 

 tion, an incision one and a half inches long made through the skin 

 and superficial fascia in the middle line of the neck, the tissues care- 

 fully separated, the deep fascia cautiously opened, the tissues sepa- 

 rated with the point of the forceps and a grooved director, the 

 sheath of the vessels opened, and the artery completely separated 

 from its surrounding tissues for a distance of at least an inch. A 

 ligature is now tightly tied about the artery at the distal end of ex- 

 posure, and a ligature placed in position and loosely looped ready to 

 tie ab9ut the proximal end. A tube with a sharp lateral tubulature, 

 as is shown in the illustration, is now made ready by breaking ofi 



Fig. 78. — Showing the method of taking blood from the carotid artery 



of a rabbit. 



the closed tip, the moistened forefinger of the operator is placed 

 beneath the artery, and the sharp tube inserted (point toward the . 

 heart) into the artery, through whose walls it cuts its way easily. 

 The moment the vessel is entered the blood-pressure drives the blood 

 into the tube so that 20 cc. maybe collected inaboutasmany seconds. 

 An assistant now ties the artery at its proximal end, the tube is with- 

 drawn, holding it so that the blood does not escape, and the end 

 sealed in a flame. The ends of the ligatures are now cut short and 

 the external wound stitched. The wound usually heals at once, and 

 if subsequent study of the blood is required, the other carotid and 

 the femorals can be similarly employed for obtaining it. 



Small quantities of blood (drops) can be secured from mice and 

 rats by cutting off the tip of the tail, but to secure a large quantity 



