A Practical Treatise On Uterine Hemorrhage, in Connexion With Pregnancy And Parturition

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nature and those of the vegetable creation was long since traced by Leake, who says, '* If we may compare vegetables with animals, it seems most likely, that the child in the womb is at first nomished by the same absorbent power as roots in the earth ; or like parasitick plants, which draw their nou- rishment from the body into which they are inserted."* The fact of the red particles of the blood not passing from the uterus to the infant, is no contradiction to the continuity of the vessels ; f
...or, besides the result of Majendie's experiments, the colouring matter of madder, when mixed with the aliment taken by the mother, has been fomid to tinge the bones of the foetus.
Several valid objections have been advanced against the theory of a directly continuous circulation. The chief argument is grounded upon the absence of isochronism or synchronism between the pulse of the foetus and that of the mother. Whatever view may be taken as to the continuity of the circulation, the current necessarily is arrested, and under- goes those changes which invest it with its peculiar character.


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