Page:A descriptive catalogue of the Warren Anatomical Museum.djvu/92

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search
This page needs to be proofread.

70 HEALTHY ANATOMY.

otherwise well formed, died on the third clay, and was sent to Dr. B. 1860. Dr. Henry J. Bigelow.

��SERIES XIII. LIVER AND DUCTS.

685. A wax preparation of the organ, with the gall-bladder and ducts, lymphatics and blood-vessels. 1847.

Dr. J. C. Warren.

686. Liver of a mature foetus, with diaphragm ; dried. 1847.

Dr. J. C. Warren.

687. Entire absence of the liver, in a foetus, 3 in. in length, and that was removed from the Fallopian tube ; the woman dying, as usual in cases of tubular pregnancy, from copious hemorrhage into the peritoneal cavity. The umbilical vein entered the vena cava near the diaphragm ; spleen very small ; and otherwise the ftetus, which was entire when re- ceived with the uterus, was well formed. The contents of the small intestine, which, however, was not opened, had a very marked green color, to the extent of a line or more, but not in anj- other part ; and the possibility of a vicari- ous secretion of bile was suggested. 1862.

Dr. E. P. Abbe, of New Bedford.

��688. Organ very much fissured and lobulated ; from Dr.

who died of phthisis. Undoubtedly congenital. 1855.

Dr. J. B. S. Jackson.

689. Cast, from a malformed foetus (siren), showing a very irregular development of the left lobe. 1869.

Museum Fund.

690. A flattened portion of liver, about f in. in diameter, and that was found in a fold of peritoneum, near the longitudi- nal fissure, and fairly separated from the main body of the organ. From an adult. 1860. ' Dr. C. Ellis.

691. Spiral valve of the cystic duct ; enough of which last has been cut away to show that it is not continuously spiral.

Dr. J. B. S. Jackson.

�� �