The Anatomy of Humane Bodies Epitomized: Wherein All the Parts of Man's Body with Their Actions and Uses ..

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Awnsham and John Churchill, 1703 - 636 pagina's
 

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Pagina 241 - I shall not mention any observation upon other parts of the abdomen, as being not to our present purpose. Then we cut open the thorax and taking out the gullet (with the windpipe, lungs, etc.) continued to the stomach. Then we made a slit In the stomach and put a pipe in its upper orifice, and blowing, we found the wind had a vent, but not by the top of the gullet. Then we carefully slit up the back side of the gullet from the stomach upwards, and when we had gone a little above half way toward the...
Pagina 241 - ... what was offered It In a spoon with greediness, but when it went to swallow it, it was like to be choaked; and what should have gone down, returned by the mouth and nose, and it fell Into a struggling convulsive sort of a fit upon it. It was very fleshy and large and was two days old when I was called to It but the next day died. The parents being willing to have it opened, I took two physicians and a surgeon with me. On opening the abdomen first, the guts had some of the meconium remaining still...
Pagina 242 - ... above mentioned. Now, I say, this is a plain confirmation of the foetus's being nourished by the mouth; for the gula being impervious, Nature had formed this hole In the wind-pipe and gullet for the liquor contained in the amnios to pass Into the stomach, which it might do without prejudice, or any fear of choaking in the womb, while the child breathed not; but when it was born and came to breathe, there could be no longer any passage this way, and so the Infant was necessarily famished.
Pagina 296 - ... its veins and arteries EFGH I. E is the vena cava, or hollow vein by which the blood descends; G is the pulmonary artery, through which it passes out of this ventricle into the lungs; and H is the pulmonary vein from which the same blood returns from the lungs into the left ventricle of the heart, out of which it is carried by the aorta, or great artery I, to all the parts of the body. C is the right auricle of the heart into which the blood passes from E and F before it falls into the right...
Pagina 241 - ... pipe in its upper orifice, and blowing, we found the wind had a vent, but not by the top of the gullet. Then we carefully slit up the back side of the gullet from the stomach upwards, and when we had gone a little above half way toward the pharynx we found It hollow no further. Then we began to slit it open from the pharynx downwards, and it was hollow till within an inch of the other slit, and in the imperforate part it was narrower than in the hollowed. This isthmus (as It were) did not seem...
Pagina 392 - For whatever serum is separated into the ventricles of the brain and tissues out of them through the infundibulum to the glandula pituitaria distils not upon the palate but is poured again into the blood and mixed with it.
Pagina 290 - Arteries)therc muft pafs in half an Hours time, fix Pounds of Liquor, all which muft come from the Heart ; and how much more then may we conceive to be driven through all the other Arteries that run through the whole Body? 2. Our fecond Argument to prove it may be taken from the Valves into the Veins, which...
Pagina 241 - ... gone a little above half way toward the pharynx we found it hollow no further. Then we began to slit it open from the pharynx downwards, and it was hollow till within an inch of the other slit, and in the imperforate part it was narrower than in the hollowed. This isthmus (as it were) did not seem ever to have been hollow, for in the bottom of the upper and the top of the lower cavity there was not the least print of any such thing, but the parts were here as smooth as the bottom of an acorn...
Pagina 294 - Suppoimg the heart to make two thoufand pulfes in an hour, and that at every pulfe there is expelled an ounce of blood; as the whole mafs of blood is not ordinarily computed to exceed twentyfour pounds, it muft be circulated feven or eight times over in the fpace of an hour. The curious, in microfcopic obfervations, have found an eafy method of feeing the circulation of the blood in the bodies of animals : for thefe...
Pagina 513 - The obliquus capitis inferior ariies from the fpinous procefs of the fecond vertebra of the neck, and is inferted into the tranfverfe procefs of the firft vertebra of the neck. This mufcle afts very powerfully in giving a rotatory motion to the head.

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