f 
' $ 
jSs, 
vV S 
\ 
Editorial gcprtnunf. 
REVIEWS AND BIBLIOGRAPHICAL NOTICES. 
PAGET’S SURGICAL PATHOLOGY. 
[Continued.] 
Mr. Paget embraces in his theory the doctrine of complemental 
nutrition, first taught by C. F. Wolff, illustrating the subject as 
follows : 
“ A great change in nutrition rarely takes place in a single 
organ at a time ; for example, the growth of the beard at the 
period of puberty in man, the growth and perfection of the plum- 
age of the bird at breeding time; but as in man, when the 
development of the genital organs is prevented, that of the beard 
and all other external sexual characters is, sts a consequence, 
hindered, so in birds, when the breeding season ends, and the 
sexual organs pass gradually into their periodic atrophy, at once 
the plumage begins to assume the pale and more sober colors, 
which characterizes the barrenness of winter. ” He next refers 
to certain interesting specimens presented to the museum by Sir 
Philip Egerton, showing the interesting fact, “ that if a buck be 
castrated while his antlers are still covered with vejt, their growth is 
checked, they remain as if truncated, and irregular nodules of 
bone project from their surfaces.” “ The fact is not, hitherto, 
explained ; it is inexplicable, by believing that the materials which, 
in the formation of these organs of external sexual character, are 
removed from the blood, leave or maintain the blood in the state 
necessary for the further development, growth and active function 
of the proper sexual or reproductive organs.” u The concurrent 
development of the thymus gland and air breathing organs during 
the body’s growth of the thyroid gland and the brain, (instances 
I 
a 
0 1 23456789 10 Missouri 
BOTAN ICAL 
cm copyright reserved garden 
