- •Inguinal hernia, in which the protrusion of the intestine is limited to the region of the groin.
- •Inflammation of the pleura, often as a complication of a disease such as pneumonia, accompanied by accumulation of fluid in the pleural cavity, chills, fever, and painful breathing and coughing.
- •London University College:
- •VI preface.
- •VIII preface.
- •Introductory to the study of anatomy as a science.
- •X table of contents.
- •XII table of contents.
- •10 Commentary on plates 1 & 2.
- •(Page 13)
- •14 Commentary on plates 3 & 4.
- •I. Temporal artery, with its accompanying vein.
- •(Page 17)
- •18 Commentary on plates 5 & 6.
- •I. Occipital artery crossing the internal carotid artery and jugular vein.
- •(Page 21)
- •I. Layer of the cervical fascia, which invests the sterno-mastoid and trapezius muscles.
- •(Page 25 )
- •28 Commentary on plates 9 & 10.
- •I. Left sterno-thyroid muscle, cut.
- •( Page 29)
- •32 Commentary on plates 11 & 12.
- •I. A layer of fascia, encasing the lesser pectoral muscle.
- •I. Thoracic half of the greater pectoral muscle.
- •(Page 33)
- •34 Commentary on plates 13 & 14.
- •36 Commentary on plates 13 & 14.
- •(Page 37)
- •40 Commentary on plates 15 & 16.
- •(Page 41)
- •42 Commentary on plates 17,18, & 19.
- •44 Commentary on plates 17, 18, & 19.
- •I. Tendon of flexor carpi radialis muscle.
- •I. Tendon of second extensor of the thumb.
- •(Page 45 )
- •46 Commentary on plates 20 & 21.
- •(Page 49)
- •52 Commentary on plate 22.
- •Description of plate 22.
- •I I*. Eighth pair of ribs.
- •(Page 53 )
- •54 Commentary on plate 23.
- •56 Commentary on plate 23.
- •Description of plate 23.
- •I I*. Right and left lungs collapsed, and turned outwards, to show the heart's outline.
- •(Page 57 )
- •Description of plate 24.
- •(Page 61 )
- •62 Commentary on plate 25.
- •64 Commentary on plate 25.
- •Description of plate 25.
- •66 Commentary on plate 26.
- •68 Commentary on plate 26.
- •Description of plate 26.
- •(Page 69)
- •70 Commentary on plate 27.
- •72 Commentary on plate 27.
- •Description of plate 27.
- •I. Superficial epigastric vein.
- •(Page 73)
- •74 Commentary on plates 28 & 29.
- •76 Commentary on plates 28 & 29.
- •I. The sartorius muscle covered by a process of the fascia lata.
- •I. The femoral vein.
- •(Page 77)
- •80 Commentary on plates 30 & 31.
- •(Page 81)
- •I. Transversalis muscle.
- •(Page 85)
- •86 Commentary on plates 35,36,37, & 38.
- •88 Commentary on plates 35, 36, 37, & 38.
- •I. The new situation assumed by the neck of the sac of an old external hernia which has gravitated inwards from its original place at h.
- •90 Commentary on plates 39 & 40.
- •Plate 39--Figure 2
- •Plate 39--Figure 3
- •Plate 40--Figure 1.
- •Plate 40--Figure 2.
- •Plate 40--Figure 3.
- •92 Commentary on plates 39 & 40.
- •Plate 40--Figure 4.
- •Plate 40--Figure 5.
- •Plate 41--Figure 1
- •Plate 41--Figure 2
- •94 Commentary on plates 41 & 42.
- •Plate 41--Figure 4
- •Plate 41--Figure 5
- •Plate 41--Figure 6
- •Plate 41--Figure 7
- •Plate 41--Figure 8
- •Plate 42--Figure 1
- •Plate 42--Figure 2
- •96 Commentary on plates 41 & 42.
- •Plate 42--Figure 3
- •Plate 42--Figure 4
- •(Page 97)
- •98 Commentary on plates 43 & 44.
- •Plate 45.--figure 1
- •Plate 45.--figure 4
- •102 Commentary on plates 45 & 46.
- •Plate 45.--figure 5
- •Plate 45.--figure 6
- •Plate 46.--figure 1
- •Plate 46.--figure 2
- •104 Commentary on plates 45 & 46.
- •(Page 105)
- •106 Commentary on plate 47.
- •Description of plate 47.
- •(Page 109)
- •110 Commentary on plates 48 & 49.
- •112 Commentary on plates 49 & 49.
- •(Page 113)
- •114 Commentary on plates 50 & 51.
- •116 Commentary on plates 50 & 51.
- •I I. The glutei muscles.
- •(Page 117)
- •118 Commentary on plates 52 & 53.
- •Plate 54, Figure 1.
- •122 Commentary on plates 54, 55, & 56.
- •Plate 55--Figure 1
- •Plate 55--Figure 2
- •Plate 55--Figure 3
- •124 Commentary on plates 54, 55, & 56.
- •Plate 57.--Figure 1.
- •126 Commentary on plates 57 & 58.
- •Plate 57.--Figure 15.
- •Plate 58.--Figure 1.
- •Plate 58.--Figure 2.
- •128 Commentary on plates 57 & 58.
- •(Page 129)
- •130 Commentary on plates 59 & 60.
- •Plate 59.--Figure 3.
- •Plate 59.--Figure 12.
- •132 Commentary on plates 59 & 60.
- •Plate 60.--Figure 6
- •134 Commentary on plates 61 & 62.
- •136 Commentary on plates 61 & 62.
- •Plate 62.--Figure 6.
- •138 Commentary on plates 63 & 64.
- •Plate 63,--Figure 1.
- •Plate 64,--Figure 8.
- •142 Commentary on plates 65 & 66.
- •146 Commentary on plates 67 & 68.
- •148 Commentary on plates 67 & 68.
- •I I. The venae comites.
- •(Page 149)
- •International donations are gratefully accepted, but we cannot make
- •Including how to make donations to the Project Gutenberg Literary
I. Left sterno-thyroid muscle, cut.
K. Right sterno-hyoid muscle.
L. Right sterno-mastoid muscle.
M. Trachea.
N. Projection of the thyroid cartilage.
O. Place of division of common carotid.
P. Place where the subclavian artery passes beneath the clavicle.
Q. Sternal end of the left clavicle.
Plate 10
COMMENTARY ON PLATES 11 & 12.
THE SURGICAL DISSECTION OF THE AXILLARY AND BRACHIAL REGIONS, DISPLAYING THE RELATIVE ORDER OF THEIR CONTAINED PARTS.
All surgical regions have only artificial boundaries; and these, as might be expected, do not express the same meaning while viewed from more points than one. These very boundaries themselves, being moveable parts, must accordingly influence the relative position of the structures which they bound, and thus either include within or exclude from the particular region those structures wholly or in part which are said to be proper to it. Of this kind of conventional surgical boundary the moveable clavicle is an example; and the bloodvessels which it overarches manifest consequently neither termination nor origin except artificially from the fixed position which the bone, R, assumes, as in Plate 11, or c*, Plate 12. In this position of the arm in relation to the trunk, the subclavian artery, B, terminates at the point where, properly speaking, it first takes its name; and from this point to the posterior fold of the axilla formed by the latissimus dorsi muscle, O, Plate 11, N, Plate 12, and the anterior fold formed by the great pectoral muscle, K, Plate 11, I, Plate 12, the continuation of the subclavian artery is named axillary. From the posterior fold of the axilla, O P, Plate 11, to the bend of the elbow, the same main vessels take the name of brachial.
When the axillary space is cut into from the forepart through the great pectoral muscle, H K, Plate 11, and beneath this through the lesser pectoral muscle, L I, together with the fascial processes which invest these muscles anteriorly and posteriorly, the main bloodvessels and nerves which traverse this space are displayed, holding in general that relative position which they exhibit in Plate 11. These vessels, with their accompanying nerves, will be seen continued from those of the neck; and thus may be attained in one view a comparative estimate of the cervical and axillary regions, together with their line of union beneath the clavicle, c*, Plate 12, R, Plate 11, which serves to divide them surgically.
In the neck, the subclavian artery, B, Plate 11, is seen to be separated from the subclavian vein, A, by the breadth of the anterior scalenus muscle, D, as the vessels arch over the first rib, F. In this region of the course of the vessels, the brachial plexus of nerves, C, ranges along the outer border of the artery, B, and is separated by the artery from the vein, A, as all three structures pass beneath the clavicle, R, and the subclavius muscle, E. From this latter point the vessels and nerves take the name axillary, and in this axillary region the relative position of the nerves and vessels to each other and to the adjacent organs is somewhat changed. For now in the axillary region the vein, a, is in direct contact with the artery, b, on the forepart and somewhat to the inner side of which the vein lies; while the nerves, D, d, Plate 12, embrace the artery in a mesh or plexus of chords, from which it is often difficult to extricate it, for the purpose of ligaturing, in the dead subject, much less the living. The axillary plexus of nerves well merits the name, for I have not found it in any two bodies assuming a similar order or arrangement. Perhaps the order in which branches spring from the brachial plexus that is most constantly met with is the one represented at D, Plate 12, where we find, on the outer border of B, the axillary artery, a nervous chord, d, giving off a thoracic branch to pass behind H, the lesser pectoral muscle, while the main chord itself, d, soon divides into two branches, one the musculo-cutaneous, e, which pierces G, the coraco-brachialis muscle, and the other which forms one of the roots of the median nerve, h. Following that order of the nerves as they are shown in Plate 12, they may be enumerated from without inwards as follows:--the external or musculo-cutaneous, e; the two roots of the median, h; the ulnar, f; the musculo-spiral, g; the circumflex, i; close to which are seen the origins of the internal cutaneous, the nerve of Wrisberg, some thoracic branches, and posteriorly the subscapular nerve not seen in this view of the parts.
