Page:A descriptive catalogue of the Warren Anatomical Museum.djvu/534

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512 MORBID ANATOMY.

considerably since it dried. With it were six others, small, hard, angular, and bronze-colored.

From a painter, set. sixty-five years. Quite intemperate for very many years, and health poor. Died of scirrhus of the stomach. 1861.

Mr. S. G. Minassian, med. student.

2420. A calculus, of a regular, oval form ; and, sawed longi- tudinally, it measures on the cut surface, 1J in. by in. Color, brownish. A marked nucleus, % in. by in., seems to consist mainly of cholesterine. 1860.

Dr. G. C. JShattucJc.

2421. A rounded, blackish, crumbling calculus, 1 J in. in diam- eter ; and with this were quite a number of small ones.

From a gentleman, aet. fifty-three years, who had disease of the liver. 1857. Dr. C. Ellis.

2422. Four rounded, smooth, compact calculi, with very marked facjettes ; each about two-thirds as large as the last joint of the thumb.

From a gentleman, set. fifty-four years, of sedentary habits, and who died of disease of the heart and kidneys. No hepatic symptoms reported. 1859. Dr. C. Ellis.

2423. A rounded calculus, finely granulated upon the surface, rather more than an inch in diameter, and of a peculiar grayish color. 1859. Dr. J. B. S. Jackson.

2424. A calculus, exceedingly rough upon the surface, and nearly f in. in diameter. From a man, set. seventy years, who died from an accident. (Hospital, 80, 172.) 1859.

Dr. G. Ellis.

2425. Two calculi, of a flattened spherical form, and nearly f in. in diameter. From a man, set. sixty, who died of cancer of the liver and lungs. (Hospital, 225, 26.) 1859.

Dr. C. Ellis.

2426. A very dark calculus, somewhat crumbling, and about as large as a robin's egg. From a woman, set. sixty-two, who died of disease of the liver. (Hospital, 157, 164.) 1849. Dr. Waldo J. Burnett.

2427. Two yellowish calculi, about as large as the end of the finger. From a woman, set. seventy-three. Disease of the heart ; and the liver healthy. 1850. Dr. C. D. Homans.

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