Page:A descriptive catalogue of the Warren Anatomical Museum.djvu/372

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350 MORBID ANATOMY.

to have pain and numbness in the left lower extremity ; the pain being mostly below the knee, and gradually in- creasing until it became very intense. Three weeks before death the left foot became gangrenous, and the outer half of the foot and leg at last sphacelated ; the inner portion never becoming affected. A line of demarcation having formed below the knee, Dr. M. amputated the thigh, but only as a palliative ; the branches of the profunda bleeding freely, though the femoral was closed. The operation quite relieved the pain in the leg, and the patient died on the sixth day.

The right external iliac artery was filled with recent fibrine ; and, upon the left side, some of the arteries below the knee, as well as the femoral, were filled with old fibrine. (See Med. Jour. June llth, 1868.) 1868.

Dr. Henry A. Martin, of Roxbury.

1752. Thoracic aorta ossified ; dried. 1847.

Dr. J. C. Warren.

1753. Abdominal; ditto. 1850. Dr. C. D. Homans.

1754. Tibial ; ditto. The cretaceous deposit is granular, as usual in the small arteries ; and not in plates, as in the aorta. 1869. Dr. H. H. A. Beach.

1755. Coronary artery of the artery of the heart ; ditto. 1854.

Dr. J. B. S. Jackson.

1756. Arteries of the leg, extensively ossified ; from a case of gangrene of the foot.' (No. 1623.) 1855.

Dr. H. G. Clark.

1757. Iliac arteries, with the lower portion of the aorta, injected. The arteries are much dilated, elongated, and tortuous. 1856. Dr. R. M. Hodges.

1758. Dilatation of the asc. portion of the aorta, towards the right side and front ; and of the arch to beyond the great vessels. Injected. 1847. Dr. J. C. Warren.

1759. Aorta injected to beyond the arch, and showing a fusi- form dilatation above the valves. 1851.

1760. Thoracic aorta, much diseased and somewhat ulcerated, but with very little ossific deposit. From Dr. R., of this

city ; set. sixty-nine. Death from disease of the heart. 1847. Dr. J. B. S. Jackson.

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