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THE INNERVATION OF THE PELVIC AND ADJOIN- ING VISCERA. J. N. LANGLEY, Sc.D., F.R.S., Fellow BY of Trinity AND H. K. ANDERSON, M.B., Caius College, College, Cambridge. (Plate III. Sixteen Figures in Text.) PART VII. ANATOMICAL OBSERVATIONS. IN the course of our experiments upon the pelvic and adjoining viscera we have had occasion to make dissections in the cat and rabbit of manv the lumbar sacral and sympathetic nerves, and of the lumbo-sacral plexus; we propose, therefore, to give a short account of such of these anatomical observations as supplement or differ from the published accounts of other authors. In the dog our dissections have been few, but we shall note certain differences between the dog and cat. A. VISCERAL NERVES. The inferior mesenteric ganglia and their branches in the cat. The inferior mesenteric ganglia afford the best starting point for the dissection of the lumbar sympathetic nerves which supply the pelvic viscera, since they are at once conspicuous when the abdomen is opened and the colon drawn to one side. They are usually, as mentioned by in above and two Navrocki and Scabitschewsky', four number, two below the inferior mesenteric artery, about half an inch distant from the
The Journal of Physiology – Wiley
Published: Oct 19, 1896
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