Identifier: anatomydescripti1877grey
Title: Anatomy, descriptive and surgical
Yr: 1877 (1870s)
Authors: Grey, Henry, 1825-1861 Holmes, Timothy, 1825-1907
Topics: Anatomy Human anatomy
Writer: [London : Longmans, Green]
Contributing Library: Francis A. Countway Library of Medication
Digitizing Sponsor: Open Information Commons and Harvard Medical Faculty
View E-book Web page: E-book Viewer
About This E-book: Catalog Entry
View All Photographs: All Photographs From E-book
Click on right here to view e-book on-line to see this illustration in context in a browseable on-line model of this e-book.
Textual content Showing Earlier than Picture:
r, and aboutan inch and a half behind the orificeof the urethra. The trigone corre-sponds with the interval on the base ofthe bladder, bounded by the prostatein entrance, and the vesioulae and vasadeferentia on the perimeters. Projectingfrom the decrease and anterior a part of thebladder, into the orifice of the urethra,is a slight elevation of mucous mem-brane, known as the uvula vesicce. It isformed by a thickening of the prostate. The arteries supplying, the bladderare the superior, center, and inferiorvesical, within the male, with additionalbranches from the uterine, within the fe-male. They're all derived from theanterior trunk of the inner iliac. The veins type a sophisticated plexusround the neck, sides, and base of thebladder, and terminate within the internaliliac vein. The lymphatics accompany the blood-vessels, passing via the glandssuriounding them. ^ The nerves are derived from the hypogastric and sacral plexuses; the formersupplying the higher a part of the organ, the latter its base and neck.
Textual content Showing After Picture:
•^ftafi^* ilALE UrETHEA. The urethra extends from the neck of the bladder to the meatus urinarius. Itpresents a double curve within the flaccid state of the penis, however within the erect state it MALE URETHRA. 715 varieties solely a single curve, the concavity of wliich is directed upwards (fig. 402).Its size varies from eight to 9 inches ; and it's divided into three parts,the prostatic, membranous, and spongy, the construction and relations of which areessentially totally different. The Prostatic jportion is the widest and most dilatable a part of the canal. Itpasses via the prostate gland, from its base to the apex, mendacity nearer its upperthan its decrease floor. It's about an inch and 1 / 4 in size ; the shape ofthe canal is spindle-shaped, being wider within the center than at both extremityand narrowest in entrance, the place it joins the membranous portion. A transversesection of the canal on this scenario is triangular, the apex directed downwards. Upon the ground of the canal is a slender longit
Notice About Photographs
Please notice that these photos are extracted from scanned web page photos that will have been digitally enhanced for readability - coloration and look of those illustrations might not completely resemble the unique work.
Tagged: , bookid:anatomydescripti1877grey , bookyear:1877 , bookdecade:1870 , bookcentury:1800 , bookauthor:Gray__Henry__1825_1861 , bookauthor:Holmes__Timothy__1825_1907 , booksubject:Anatomy , booksubject:Human_anatomy , bookpublisher:_London___Longmans__Green_ , bookcontributor:Francis_A__Countway_Library_of_Medicine , booksponsor:Open_Knowledge_Commons_and_Harvard_Medical_School , bookleafnumber:867 , bookcollection:medicalheritagelibrary , bookcollection:francisacountwaylibrary , bookcollection:americana
No comments:
Post a Comment