On the opposite side, of late years, have been some who incline to a very different view, thinking that they find cogent reasons for placing fibrin on the same scale as the extractive matters, and for reckoning it among those elements which have arisen... Transactions - Seite 79von Illinois State Medical Society - 1875Vollansicht - Über dieses Buch
| 1851 - 584 Seiten
...the fibrin of the blood is one of those elements of the circulating fluid " which have arisen in it from its own decay, or have reverted to it from the waste of the tissues;" instead of being, as most physiologists regard it, "that ingredient of the blood which, in the ascending... | |
| 1851 - 588 Seiten
...the fibrin of the blood is one of those elements of the circulating fluid " which have arisen in it from its own decay, or have reverted to it from the waste of the tissues ;" instead of being, as most physiologists regard it, " that ingredient of the blood which, in the... | |
| William Braithwaite, James Braithwaite, Edmond Fauriel Trevelyan - 1851 - 778 Seiten
...Dr. Zimmerman, that the fibrin of those elements of the circulating fluid " which have arisen in it from its own decay, or have reverted to it from the waste of the tissues ;" instead of being as most physiologists regard it, " that ingredient of the blood which, in the ascending... | |
| Sir John Simon - 1852 - 258 Seiten
...who incline to a very different view, thinking that they find cogent reasons for placing fibrin on the same scale as the extractive matters, and for...tell you the arguments which induce me to adopt it. First, I find that fibrin is undiminished by bleeding, however frequently repeated ; nay, that it often,... | |
| Sir John Simon - 1852 - 274 Seiten
...who incline to a very different view, thinking that they find cogent reasons for placing fibrin on the same scale as the extractive matters, and for...tell you the arguments which induce me to adopt it. First, I find that fibrin is undiminished by bleeding, however frequently repeated ; nay, that it often,... | |
| William Benjamin Carpenter - 1853 - 1146 Seiten
...the Fibrin of the blood is one of those elements of the circulating fluid " which have arisen in it from its own decay, or have reverted to it from the waste of the tissues," instead of being, as represented above, " that ingredient of the blood, which, in the ascending scale... | |
| Robert Bentley Todd - 1856 - 700 Seiten
...ingredient prepared for the nourishment of certain tissues and ready to be appropriated by them, but as " among those elements which have arisen in the blood...have reverted to it from the waste of the tissues." Mr. Simon has been led to adopt this opinion chiefly from observing the unaltered or even increased... | |
| 1860 - 790 Seiten
...is, in reality, an accrementitions compound, not at all available for nutrition, and to be reckoned " among those elements which have •arisen in the blood...have reverted to it from the waste of the tissues," and are in process of elimination from the system. (Simon's General Pathology, p. 44.) ROKITANSKY speaks... | |
| 1859 - 772 Seiten
...is, in reality, an excrementitious compound, not at all available for nutrition, and to be reckoned among those elements which have arisen in the blood...have reverted to it from the waste of the tissues, and are in process of elimination from the system." 1st. "Fibrin is a constituent of the chyle. Evident... | |
| 1860 - 976 Seiten
...in reality, an excrcincntitious compound, not at all available • for nutrition, and to be reckoned among those elements which have arisen in the blood...have reverted to it from the waste of the tissues, and are in process of elimination from the system." Prof. Joynes adheres to the older theory, until... | |
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