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قراءة كتاب The Anatomy of the Human Peritoneum and Abdominal Cavity Considered from the Standpoint of Development and Comparative Anatomy

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The Anatomy of the Human Peritoneum and Abdominal Cavity
Considered from the Standpoint of Development and Comparative Anatomy

The Anatomy of the Human Peritoneum and Abdominal Cavity Considered from the Standpoint of Development and Comparative Anatomy

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دار النشر: Project Gutenberg
الصفحة رقم: 4

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    2. Structural Modifications of Proximal Segment of Colon analogous in their Functional Significance to the Cæcal Apparatus 230V. Cæcal Apparatus and Colon in Hyrax. 234 Part IV. Morphology of the Human Cæcum and Vermiform Appendix 237   I. Development of the Cæcum and Appendix 237   II. Changes in the Position of the Cæcum and Appendix during normal Development, depending upon the Rotation of the Intestine and the subsequent Descent of the Cæcum 239   III. Variations of Adult Cæcum and Appendix 244     A. Shape of Cæcum and Origin of Appendix. Types and Variations of Adult Cæcum and Appendix 245     B. Position and Peritoneal Relations of Appendix 250     C. Ileo-Cæcal Folds and Fossæ 260

INTRODUCTION.

In considering the anatomy of the human abdominal cavity and peritoneum in the following pages the explanation of the adult conditions encountered is based upon the development of the parts, and the successive human embryonal stages are illustrated by the examination of the lower vertebrates presenting permanent adult structural conditions which appear as merely temporary embryonal stages in the development of the higher mammalian alimentary tract.

For the sake of clearness and brevity all discussion of the theories of peritoneal development has been designedly omitted. The assumption of peritoneal adhesion, and consequent obliteration of serous areas, offers many advantages in considering the adult human abdominal cavity, especially from the standpoint of comparative anatomy. The same has consequently been adopted without reference to divergent views and theories.

In studying the descriptive text and the diagrams the student should remember that the volume offers in no sense a complete or detailed account of the development of the abdominal cavity and its contents. The purpose is not to present the embryology of this portion of the vertebrate body, but to utilize certain embryological facts in order to explain the complicated adult conditions encountered. To avoid confusion, and to bring the salient points into strong relief, the majority of the diagrams illustrating human embryonal stages are purely schematic.

Moreover, in order to avoid confusing and unnecessary details it is often desirable to disregard developmental chronology entirely. Many of the diagrams combine several successive developmental stages, showing different degrees of development in different portions of the same drawing. Again it is frequently necessary, for the sake of brevity and clearness, to actually depart from known embryological conditions. If, for example, the stomach and liver are treated as if they were from their inception abdominal organs, the student of systematic embryology will recall the fact that this position is only obtained after their primitive differentiation by growth and migration.

Again the mesenteries are treated here as if they formed definite and well-defined membranes from the beginning—without reference to the abdominal organs with which they are associated. We speak of the liver as growing into and between the layers of the ventral mesogastrium, because this conception offers the opportunity of more clearly explaining the adult condition. Actually, however, the membrane develops, as a new structure, after the first differentiation of liver and stomach, as these organs descend into the abdominal cavity.

Similar discrepancies between fact and schema are encountered throughout. Consequently, while the purpose of the volume is to facilitate the study and comprehension of the adult peritoneal cavity and its contents, the reader should guard against receiving the developmental illustration as a correct successive and detailed account of the embryology of the parts concerned.

In like manner the comparative anatomical facts adduced form in no sense even approximately a complete serial morphological account of the vertebrate alimentary tract.

To the student of human anatomy the zoölogical position of the forms which help him to understand complicated human structural conditions is immaterial. He can draw on all the vertebrate classes independently of their mutual relations. Hence neither ontogeny nor phylogeny are here introduced, except as aids to the study of adult human anatomy. The following pages offer neither an embryology nor a comparative anatomy of the alimentary tract, but an attempt has been made in them to illustrate the significance of the complicated anatomical details presented by the adult human abdominal cavity by reference to the simpler antecedent conditions encountered during the early developmental stages of the higher forms and permanently in the structure of the lower vertebrates.

While, as just stated, a complete presentation of the development of the abdominal cavity is not required, yet the student will find it of advantage to rehearse the main facts of vertebrate embryology, for the purpose of bringing a clear understanding of the manner in which the vertebrate body is built up to bear upon the problems which the special organs and structures of the body-cavity present for his consideration. This purpose can be accomplished by a very brief and condensed consideration of the cardinal facts.

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