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" ... receiving blood by its arteries and returning it by its veins; that the circulation through these two parts of the placenta differs in the following manner: in the umbilical portion the arteries terminate in the veins by a continuity of canal, whereas... "
Abstracts of the Papers Printed in the Philosophical Transactions of the ... - Page 76
by Royal Society (Great Britain) - 1837
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An Anatomical Description of the Human Gravid Uterus, and Its Contents. By ...

William Hunter - 1794 - 108 pages
...terminate in the veins by a continuity of canal, whereas in the uterine portion there are intermediate cells into which the arteries terminate, and from which the veins begin. Though the placenta be completely filled with any injection thrown into the uterine vessels, none of...
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Abstracts of the Papers Printed in the Philosophical Transactions ..., Volume 3

Royal Society (Great Britain) - 1837 - 554 pages
...mother, each having its peculiar system of arteries and veins ; and he supposes that while, in the fcetal portion, the arteries and veins form continuous canals,...subject was afterwards investigated by Noortwych, Rcederer, and Haller, but without any satisfactory result; and the doctrines laid down by the Hunters...
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The library of medicine, arranged and ed. by A. Tweedie, Issue 230, Volume 6

Library - 1841 - 340 pages
...terminate in the veins by a continuity of canal ; whereas in the uterine portion there are intermediate cells into which the arteries terminate, and from which the veins begin." (Hunter, op. cit. p. 48.) Although various observations and anatomical injections show that, to a certain...
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An Anatomical Description of the Human Gravid Uterus and Its Contents

William Hunter - 1843 - 122 pages
...terminate in the veins by a continuity of canal, whereas in the uterine portion, there are intermediate cells, into which the arteries terminate, and from which the veins begin. Though the placenta be completely filled with any injection thrown into the uterine vessels, none of...
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A System of midwifery

Edward Rigby - 1851 - 470 pages
...terminate in the veins by a continuity of canal ; whereas, in the uterine portion there are intermediate cells into which the arteries terminate, and from which the veins begin." (Hunter, op. cit. p. 48.) Although various observations and anatomical injections show that, to a certain...
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The principles and practice of midwifery

Alexander Milne (M.D.) - 1871 - 668 pages
...terminate in the veins by a continuity of canal, whereas, in the uterine portion, there are intermediate cells, into which the arteries terminate, and from which the veins begin." Further, he adds, " In separating the placenta from the uterus, which is commonly practicable with...
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Anatomy of labour as studied in frozen sections and its bearing on clinical work

Alexander Hugh Freeland Barbour - 1889 - 306 pages
...terminate in the veins by a continuity of canal, whereas in the uterine portion there are intermediate cells into which the arteries terminate, and from which the veins begin. Though the placenta be completely filled with any injection thrown into the uterine vessels, none of...
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Catalogue of the Anatomical and Pathological Preparations of Dr ..., Volume 2

Hunterian Museum (University of Glasgow), John Hammond Teacher - 1900 - 564 pages
...terminate in the veins by a continuity of canal, whereas in the uterine portion there are intermediate cells into which the arteries terminate, and from which the veins begin. "Though the placenta be completely filled with any injection thrown into the uterine vessels, none...
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