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

 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.

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