| William Howship Dickinson - 1875 - 336 pages
...exaggeration of vessels within reach of the naked eye than from any minute or capillary injection of tissue. A practised and careful eye will often detect a fine...are seen, especially in the pons in connection with oneof the processes of the pia mater. These, large and small, become more evident, and are seen to... | |
| 1876 - 526 pages
...is, to rough examination, natural, though a practised eye may detect in it a cribriform appearance, each puncture containing a vessel much smaller than itself. More rarely considerable cavities are to be seen. On the minute examination of eleven cases, the nervous matter is found to be destroyed... | |
| 1876 - 520 pages
...is, to rough examination, natural, though a practised eye may detect in it a cribriform appearance, each puncture containing a vessel much smaller than itself. More rarely considerable cavities are to be seen. On the minute examination of eleven cases, the nervous matter is found to be destroyed... | |
| James Tyson - 1881 - 372 pages
...extract almost entire Dr. Dickinson's description of these changes : "They consist, to the naked eye, of a fine porosity or cribriform appearance in limited...connection with one of the processes of the pia mater. . . . "The microscope is not necessary for their detection, though it is for their description. For... | |
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