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XVIII. On the Ultimate Secreting Structure, and on the Laws of its Function

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  17 January 2013

John Goodsir
Affiliation:
Conservator of the Museum of the RoyalCollege of Surgeons, Edinburgh

Extract

Malpighi was the first to announce that all secreting glands are essentially composed of tubes, with blind extremities. Müller, by his laborious researches, has brought this department of the anatomy of glands to its present comparatively perfect condition. Purkinje announced his hypothesis of the secreting function of the nucleated epithelium of the gland ducts, but made no statement to shew that he had verified it by observation. Schwann suggested that the epithelium of the mucous membranes might be the secreting organ of these surfaces. Henle described minutely the epithelium cells which line the ducts of the principal glands and follicles, but did not prove that these are the secreting organs. The same anatomist has stated, that the terminal extremities of certain gland ducts are closed vesicles, within which the secretion is formed, and which contain nucleated cells. Henle has not, therefore, verified the hypothesis of Purkinje, although he is correct in stating that the terminal vesicles of certain gland ducts are closed. It will be shewn, in the course of this paper, that the secretion is not formed, as Henle has asserted, in the closed vesicles, but in the nucleated cells themselves.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Royal Society of Edinburgh 1844

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References

page 303 note * Mr Henry Goodsir, in a paper on the Development and Metamorphoses of Caligus, read in the Wernerian Society, April 1842, has stated that the wall of the elongated and convoluted follicle, which constitutes the ovary in that genus, grows from its blind to its free extremity, at the same rate as the eggs advance in development and position.