On the Relation of the Nervous System to Disease and Disorder in the Viscera |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 21
Page 10
... considerable a muscle as the cardiac ventricle as very sparsely supplied with nerves . Even now the " ganglion - free apex " plays a considerable rôle in physiological conceptions of the nature of rhythmical movement . This The Golgi ...
... considerable a muscle as the cardiac ventricle as very sparsely supplied with nerves . Even now the " ganglion - free apex " plays a considerable rôle in physiological conceptions of the nature of rhythmical movement . This The Golgi ...
Page 14
... considerable difficulties for the histologist of the peripheral nervous system . Its close texture and general density render the use of staining methods , as applied to the finer nerve elements , a difficult matter . So great a master ...
... considerable difficulties for the histologist of the peripheral nervous system . Its close texture and general density render the use of staining methods , as applied to the finer nerve elements , a difficult matter . So great a master ...
Page 18
... considerably simplified . Here also , however , the threefold state referred to in the con- C C FIG . 8. From the hepato - duodenal region of a mouse . ( a ) Large cluster of ganglion cells ; ( bbb ) branches ; ( c , c , c ) ganglion ...
... considerably simplified . Here also , however , the threefold state referred to in the con- C C FIG . 8. From the hepato - duodenal region of a mouse . ( a ) Large cluster of ganglion cells ; ( bbb ) branches ; ( c , c , c ) ganglion ...
Page 21
... considerable trunk ( Fig . 9 ) . A group of cells may also form a fusiform or irregular enlargement on the course of a nerve larger than the nerve itself , one end ( the afferent end ) being as it were lost in the fusiform enlargement ...
... considerable trunk ( Fig . 9 ) . A group of cells may also form a fusiform or irregular enlargement on the course of a nerve larger than the nerve itself , one end ( the afferent end ) being as it were lost in the fusiform enlargement ...
Page 22
... considerable dis- ( Fig . 15 ) . Finally , the cells may form a congeries which appear to be placed at the junction of a peripheral centrifugal system ( Fig . 8 , a ) . These various rela- tions of the peripheral gan- glionic cell may ...
... considerable dis- ( Fig . 15 ) . Finally , the cells may form a congeries which appear to be placed at the junction of a peripheral centrifugal system ( Fig . 8 , a ) . These various rela- tions of the peripheral gan- glionic cell may ...
Other editions - View all
On the Relation of the Nervous System to Disease and Disorder in the Viscera ... Alexander Morison No preview available - 2018 |
On the Relation of the Nervous System to Disease and Disorder in the Viscera Alexander Morison No preview available - 2018 |
Common terms and phrases
afferent Anatomy angina pectoris appear arborisation arteries associated body bradycardia brain cardiac cause central centres cerebral Clinical cloth coloured plates COMPEND condition connection Crown 8vo disease and disorder Dogiel Edinburgh Royal Infirmary Edition efferent efferent nerves engravings Examination Questions fibrils function ganglia ganglion cells gland Golgi Gustaf Retzius Gynecology heart histological histologists Hospital illustrations induced influence innervation Jefferson Medical College kidney Kölliker Lecturer London Medical College Medicine method motor muscle muscular nerve fibres nerve supply nerve trunks nervous system nett neural non-medullated observed Obstetrics organ organules origin Pathology Pentland's peripheral physiological pia mater plexus pneumogastric portion posterior root pregnancy present probably Professor pyramidal cells ramus referred reflex action regarded relation rhythmical royal 8vo Royal College secretion secretory sensory fibres sensory nerves somatic specimens spinal staining stimulation structures Surgeon Surgery sympathetic system systole Text-Book tion tissue University uterine uterus vasomotor vessels visceral nerves visceral pain viscus
Popular passages
Page 26 - WINCKEL. Text-Book of Obstetrics, Including the Pathology and Therapeutics of the Puerperal State. Authorized Translation by J. CLIFTON EDGAR, AM, MD With nearly 200 Illustrations.
Page 25 - Translated, with Additions, from the* Second Enlarged German Edition, with the Author's Permission, BY FRANCIS H. STUART, AM, MD...
Page 24 - THE PATHOLOGY and TREATMENT of VENEREAL DISEASES. By ROBERT W. TAYLOR, MD, Clinical Professor of Venereal Diseases at the College of Physicians and Surgeons (Columbia College) New York ; Surgeon to Bellevue Hospital ; and Consulting Surgeon to the City (Charity) Hospital, New York.
Page 12 - A Quarterly Digest of Advances, Discoveries and Improvements in the Medical and Surgical Sciences. Edited by Hobart Amory Hare, MD, Professor of Therapeutics and Materia Medica in the Jefferson Medical College of Philadelphia.
Page 58 - These dissections prove that the human uterus possesses a great system of nerves, which enlarges with the coats, blood-vessels, and absorbents, during pregnancy, and which returns after parturition to its original condition before conception takes place. It is chiefly by the influence of these nerves that the uterus performs the varied functions of menstruation, conception, and parturition, and it is solely by their means that the whole fabric of the nervous system sympathises with the different...
Page 5 - V. — Diseases and Injuries of the Ear: Their Prevention and Cure. By CHARLES H. BURNETT, AM, MD, Aural Surgeon to the Presbyterian Hospital, and one of the Consulting Aurists to the Pennsylvania Institution for the Deaf and Dumb, Philadelphia ; Lecturer on Otology, Women's Medical College of Pennsylvania, etc.
Page 6 - COMPEND of the PRACTICE of MEDICINE. By DANIEL E. HUGHES, MD, late Demonstrator of Clinical Medicine in the Jefferson Medical College of Philadelphia. Fourth Edition, revised and enlarged, Crown 8vo, Cloth, pp. 328. Price 7s.
Page 23 - Edited by Louis Starr, MD, Clinical Professor of Diseases of Children in the Hospital of the University of Pennsylvania; Physician to the Children's Hospital, Philadelphia.
Page 51 - It behooves us to clearly realise, as the broad facts which have most wide-reaching consequences in mental physiology and pathology, that all parts of the body, the highest and the lowest, have a sympathy with one another more intelligent than conscious intelligence can yet, or perhaps ever will, conceive ; that there is not an organic motion, visible, or invisible, sensible or insensible, ministrant to the noblest or to the most humble purposes, which does not work its appointed effect in the complex...
Page 37 - Without aspiring to be defined, as a learned judge is said to have defined the metaphysician, namely, as a blind man looking for a black hat in a dark room...