Page:The third Huxley lecture.pdf/43

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39

method of skin grafting. We are, therefore, driven to the other alternative, and conclude that the inflammatory congestion of those kidneys was caused by nervous action upon the renal tissues. And the suddenness with which the effect was produced strongly suggests the view that the prostration of their vital power was the primary effect of an unwonted nervous impulse.

Abnormal effusion of liquor sanguinis from the vessels, another marked feature of acute inflammatory disturbance in man, would seem a natural result of any degree of inflammatory congestion. I used to illustrate to my class by a simple experiment the enormous increase which takes place in the pressure of a liquid upon the walls of a tube through which it is flowing, when an obstacle is opposed to its passage. When, therefore, the corpuscles begin to block the capillaries the plasma will naturally be forced in undue quantity through their porous walls.

When inflammation assumes an intense degree, the effused liquor sanguinis has the peculiarity of being coagulable, producing by its solidification the characteristic "brawny" swelling of the parts among which it is poured out. In this respect it differs from the normal plasma forced by pressure through the walls of healthy capillaries as the result of venous obstruction. Here the swelling has the "doughy" character of oedema, a condition also caused by inflammation of a mild degree. To that point I shall have occasion to refer again.