Monday, July 30, 2018

Picture from web page 867 of "Anatomy, descriptive and surgical" (1877)

Picture from web page 867 of "Anatomy, descriptive and surgical" (1877) Image from page 867 of

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


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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


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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

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