English:
Identifier: diseasesofwoment00webs (find matches)
Title: Diseases of women; a text-book for students and practitioners
Year: 1898 (1890s)
Authors: Webster, John Clarence, 1863-1950
Subjects: Genital Diseases, Female
Publisher: Edinburgh, Pentland
Contributing Library: Columbia University Libraries
Digitizing Sponsor: Open Knowledge Commons
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Text Appearing Before Image:
//A A=t=)=±±=xi«— _7 /. Fig. 23.—Internal genitals in new-born child.— -After Nagel I. Uterine artery. 7. Ovary. 14. Bladder. 2. Ureter. 8. Uterus. 15- Umbilical artei 3. Ovarian artery. 9. Ilio-inguinal 16. External iliac 5. Fallopian tube. nerve. artery. 6. Round ligament. 12. Rectum. Note.—The secretion is clear, glairy mucus, and serves as a lubricatorof the vestibule and adjacent parts. During sexual excitement it maybe expelled suddenly, by the muscular fibres in the gland stroma, aswell as by the overlying bulbo-cavernosus muscle. Development.—The Bartholinian glands are formed from a buddinginwards of the epithelium of the urogenital sinus. By the time theuterus and vagina are distinct from one another, it is quite formed,though of small size. Mucus is secreted at an early age. THE OVARIAN ARTERIES. 49 BLOOD VESSELS, LYMPHATICS, NERVES. Arteries. The ovarian arteries (named spermatic in themale) sometimes arise from the aorta, close to the renal
Text Appearing After Image:
Fig. 24.—Dissection of pelvis from above.—From Xagel 1. Uterine arterj. 2. Uterine vein. 3. Obturator nerve. 4. Umbilical arter3\ 5. Obturator artery. 6. Vaginal arter>. 7. Ureter. 8. Vesical artery. 9. Vesico-vaginal vein.10. Uterus. II. Utero-sacral 19. Hj-pogastric ligaments. arter^. 12. Ovary. 20. Hypogastric 13- Tube. vein. 14. Rectum. 21. E.xtern^l iliac 15- Bladder. vein. 16. Levator ani. 22. Ovarian artery. 17- Common iliac 23. Ovarian vein. artery. 24. Psoas muscle. 18. External iliacartery. 25- Broad ligament arteries. Usually, however, the left alone has this origin,the right artery arising from the right renal. Each extends4 50 BLOOD VESSELS, NERVES, ETC. down the back wall of the abdomen, behind the peritoneum,on the inner aspect of the psoas, close to the inferior venacava for a distance. It crosses the ureter, enters the upper part of the in-fundibulo-pelvic border of the broad ligament, and runstortuously through the latter, below the ovary, towards theupper lat
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