
No other vessels but those in connection with the Aorta can possibly receive any direct supply from this method of injecting - Were there any anastomoses between the Bron= =chial <s>vessel<\s> and pulmonary vessels, it must in= =variably happen that these latter would become injected whenever the Bronchial ar= =teries were filled; but, on the contrary, such an event <u>never<\u> occurs and can <u>never<\u> be made to occur, except in an isolated portion <s>of<\s> as the direct result of violence - The injection from the Bronchial arteries, when properly made, is always seen to extend into the veins on the surface of the lungs; representations of these are shewn in the drawings Series <s>A<\s>B No<s>4<\s>5 & No<s>5<\s>6 and this result could not take place without the pulmonary vessels becoming at the same time injected, had there been any anastomosis between them and the Bronchial blood-vessels. But the injection from the Bronchial arteries invariably does pass into those veins on the surface of the lungs, and it can be shewn to do so in a hun= =dred consecutive injections, without in any one
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Manuscript details
- Author
- James Newton Heale
- Reference
- AP/43/4
- Series
- AP
- Date
- 1860
- IIIF
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Cite as
Physiological Anatomy of the Lungs, 1860. From The Royal Society, AP/43/4
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