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RF
axillary spaces-stock-foto
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Axillary Nerve-stock-foto
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Cut of skin of the palm of the hand, armpit and the rest of the body.-stock-foto
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Cut of skin of the palm of the hand, armpit and the rest of the body.-stock-foto
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flower of andrographis paniculata, commonly known as creat or green chiretta, Acanthaceae, pathogen inactivation on coronaviruses is very important, n-stock-foto
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Brown sheath  of andrographis paniculata, commonly known as creat or green chiretta, pathogen inactivation on coronaviruses is very important, note se-stock-foto
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Brown sheath  of andrographis paniculata, commonly known as creat or green chiretta, pathogen inactivation on coronaviruses is very important, note se-stock-foto
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leaves of andrographis paniculata, commonly known as creat or green chiretta, Acanthaceae, pathogen inactivation on coronaviruses is very important, n-stock-foto
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Andrographis paniculata (Burm. F) Nees, generally known as king of bitters, this plant has been widely used for treating sore throat, flu, and respira-stock-foto
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Green sheath and flower of andrographis paniculata, commonly known as creat or green chiretta, Acanthaceae, pathogen inactivation on coronaviruses is-stock-foto
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Green sheath and flower of andrographis paniculata, commonly known as creat or green chiretta, Acanthaceae, pathogen inactivation on coronaviruses is-stock-foto
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Brown sheath  of andrographis paniculata, commonly known as creat or green chiretta, pathogen inactivation on coronaviruses is very important, note se-stock-foto
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Green sheath  of andrographis paniculata, commonly known as creat or green chiretta, pathogen inactivation on coronaviruses is very important, note se-stock-foto
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Shoulder Ligaments, illustration-stock-foto
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Shoulder Ligaments, illustration-stock-foto
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Axillary artery ligation in the armpit, vintage engraved illustration. Usual Medicine Dictionary - Paul Labarthe - 1885.-stock-foto
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Axillary artery ligation in the armpit, vintage engraved illustration. Usual Medicine Dictionary - Paul Labarthe - 1885.-stock-foto
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. The breast: its anomalies, its diseases, and their treatment . clavi-pectoral fascia. Purulent collections between the pectoral muscles or behind the pectoralis majormuscle are directed to the anterior border of the axilla or to the upper end of the delto-pectoral groove by the clavi-pectoral fascia. When situated beneath the pectoralisminor muscle and therefore posterior to the fascia, abscesses are either confined to the SURGICAL ANATOMY OF THE BREAST 31 axillary space, pointing at the base of the axilla through the foramen of Langer (seeaxillary fascia), or follow the axillary sheath upwa-stock-foto
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. The breast: its anomalies, its diseases, and their treatment . Fig. 216.—The breast and pectoral muscles are in the grasp of the left hand and are being dissectedfrom the chest wall. It will be observed that the upper portion of the rectus abdominis sheath has beenremoved. The long thoracic nerve remains intact. to combat serious post- operative shock—and the only case in which it has been necessaryto make a second incision in the axilla to recover a drainage tube that had slipped intothe axillary space. The series is fairly representative of the complications that mayarise after the radical-stock-foto
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. A new manual of surgery, civil and military. Shows the axillary structures perfectly exposed. A, pectoralis major muscle; B, pectoralisminor; C, clavicular portion of pectoralis major; E, long thoracic artery and vein; F, nerveof Bell; G, alar thoracic artery and vein; H, subscapular artery, vein and nerve.. Shows the entire excision completed. A, sheath of rectus muscle; B, acroiniothoracicartery; C, long thoracic artery; D, clavicular portion of pectoralis major not removed; E,axillary vein; F, alar thoracic artery; G, subscapular muscle; H, subscapular artery andvein; I, latissimus dorsi-stock-foto
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. A new manual of surgery, civil and military. Shows the entire excision completed. A, sheath of rectus muscle; B, acroiniothoracicartery; C, long thoracic artery; D, clavicular portion of pectoralis major not removed; E,axillary vein; F, alar thoracic artery; G, subscapular muscle; H, subscapular artery andvein; I, latissimus dorsi muscle; J, subscapular nerve; K, nerve of Bell. SURGERY OF THE CHEST 219. Shows the manner in which the wound is closed without any scar tissue in the axilla.-stock-foto
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A hand-book of surgery: with fifty illustrations . near the angle of thejaw to the cricoid cartilage.The cross veins, descen-dens noni nerve, and theomo-hyoid muscle should becarefully pushed aside, the sheath opened, and the aneurismal needleintroduced between the artery and the internal jugular vein, whichis upon the outer side; great care should also be taken not to includethe par vagum nerve, which is included in the same sheath. AXILLARY ANEURISM. This tumour occupies the arm-pit and sometimes extends abovethe clavicle, producing pain and numbness in the arm. The opera-tion of tying the a-stock-foto
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Text-book of botany, morphological and physiological . Fig. 393.—Bud in the inside of a bulb of Allium Cepa, the scales having been removed, st the short flat base of thestem on which the bulb-scales are inserted ; Im A B lamina, sh the sheath of the foliage-leaves still short; in B the outerleaves have been removed, and an axillary bud k has made its appearance in addition to the terminal bud k. and the lower part of the leaf is in consequence sheathing ; and this is evidentlyconnected with the want of stipules, which are so frequent among Dicotyledons.The cataphyllary and many of the h}-psop-stock-foto
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The structure & development of the mosses and ferns (Archegoniatae) . s. Thelatter are marked by longitudinal furrows, and about each nodeis a sheath whose summit is continued into a number of teeth,varying with the size of the stem. Corresponding to eachtooth of the sheath there is developed an axillary bud, whichmay either at once develop into a shoot, subterranean oraerial, or these buds may remain dormant for an indefiniteperiod, being capable of growing, however, under favourable 1 Hofmeister (i), p. 303. 436 MOSSES AND FERNS CHAP. XIII conditions. The surface of the rhizome in E. telmate-stock-foto
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Human anatomy, including structure and development and practical considerations . rs siipraclavicularis) and an axillary ox infraclavicular yaxX. (pars infraclavicuiarisj.In the posterior cervical triangle the plexus lies first above and then to the outer sideof the subclavian artery and vein, is crossed by the posterior belly of the onio-liyoidmuscle and is frequently threaded by the transverse cervical or the posterior scapu-lar artery. After entering the axilla its component parts, while lying mainly to theouter side, forma close fasces around the axillary artery, whose sheath they occupy.-stock-foto
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The drug plants of Illinois  drugplantsofilli44teho Year: 1951    POLYGONUM AVIGULARE L. Knotgrass, knotweed, dooryard weed, mat grass. Polygonaceae.—A prostrate or ascending, much-branched, matted herb, annual; stems slender, striate; leaves bluish-green, lanceolate, 14 ^o ^ inch long, alternate, entire; petioles very short, con- nected with a papery sheath at the stem node; flowers pinkish, very small, in axillary clusters; fruit a small, 3-angled, reddish-brown to black, dull achene or seed. The herb collected; also occasionally the root and seeds. Common in waste places throughout the stat-stock-foto
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. Text-book of botany, morphological and physiological. Botany. FlG. 424.—Bud in the inside of a bulb of Allhcm Cepa, the scales having been removed; st the short flat base of the stem on which the bulb-scales are inserted; /in A lamina, sh the sheath of the foliage-leaves still short; in B the outer leaves have been removed, and an axillary bud k" has made its appearance in addition to the terminal bud k'. of divergence 1/z is much rarer, but occurs in some species of Aloe, Car ex, Pan- danus, &c. Spiral arrangements with a smaller divergence than V3 also occur sometimes; as e.g. in-stock-foto
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. Anatomy, descriptive and applied. Anatomy. 636 THE VASCULAR SYSTEMS spending Intercostal muscle, the first and second digitations of the Serratus magnus, and the Long thoracic nerve; on its outer side, with the brachial plexus, from which it is separated by a little areolar tissue; on its inner or thoracic side, with the axillary vein, which overlaps the artery. It is enclosed, together with the axillary vein and the brachial plexus, in a fibrous sheath—the axillary sheath—continuous above with the cervical fascia. Relations of the First Portion of the Axillary Artery. In front. Pectoralis m-stock-foto
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. Bulletin of the British Museum (Natural History). Zoology . Supplement.. 72 P. J. P. WHITEHEAD. Fig. 21. Pellona castelnaeana Valenciennes. From Hildebrand 1964 (as Ilisha altamazonica). Dorsal origin equidistant between snout and caudal base ; base of fin invested in low scaly sheath. Pectoral fin tips just reaching base of pelvic fins (left shorter) ; large axillary scale present, 1-71 times in length of fin. Pelvic base almost three eye diameters before vertical from dorsal origin and nearer to pectoral base than to anal origin by two-thirds eye diameter ; triangular axillary scale presen-stock-foto
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. Bulletin of the British Museum (Natural History). Zoology . Supplement.. 99. Fig. 35. Anchovia clupeoides, from the Tobago specimen described, 132-7 mm S.L. ray reaching to tip of last dorsal ray when fin depressed ; base of fin invested by low scaly sheath. Pectoral fin tips just reaching beyond pelvic base ; triangular pectoral axillary scale just over half length of fin, its lower edge folded outwards to lie over dorsal surface at base of 1st pectoral ray. Pelvic fin base nearer to pectoral base than to anal origin by half eye diameter or in vertical distances, 3 mm nearer to pectoral bas-stock-foto
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. The drug plants of Illinois. Botany, Medical; Botany. POLYGONUM AVIGULARE L. Knotgrass, knotweed, dooryard weed, mat grass. Polygonaceae.—A prostrate or ascending, much-branched, matted herb, annual; stems slender, striate; leaves bluish-green, lanceolate, 14 ^o ^ inch long, alternate, entire; petioles very short, con- nected with a papery sheath at the stem node; flowers pinkish, very small, in axillary clusters; fruit a small, 3-angled, reddish-brown to black, dull achene or seed. The herb collected; also occasionally the root and seeds. Common in waste places throughout the state. Used as-stock-foto
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. A manual of botany. Botany. Fig. 86. A portion of the stem, r, and leaf, /, of tlie Astragalus Onolrijchis. s. Synooteeate or opposite stipule. Fig. 86. A portion of the stem, r, and leaf,/, of JJoutluynia cordata. s. Axillary stipule. petiole, as in the Eose (fig. 82, s, s), they are said to be adnate, adherent, or petiolar. "When they remain as little leafy expansions on each side of the base of the petiole, but quite distinct from it, as in many "Willows and the Pansy Fig. 87.. Fig. 87, Leaf and piece of the stem of Polygonum Hydropiper. I. Lamina or blade, p. Petiole, d. Sheath-stock-foto
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. Outlines of plant life : with special reference to form and function . Botany. I'iG. gr. Fig. 92. Fig. 91. — Stipules of Polygonum forming a sheath, c, above the sheathing leaf base j, of the cut-off leaf7^; cc, the stem ; ca, an axillary shoot. Natural size.—After Frank. Fig. 92. —Leaf of lhtnspi with clasping base. Natural size.—After Prantl.. Please note that these images are extracted from scanned page images that may have been digitally enhanced for readability - coloration and appearance of these illustrations may not perfectly resemble the original work.. Barnes, Charles Reid, 1858-19-stock-foto
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. The natural history of plants. Botany. â LEGUMmOSJE-CJESALFINIEJE. 97 Brownea^ (figs. 70-72) has features of all the preceding genera. They have still the same receptacle, calyx, fruit, ami seeds; the corolla consists of five well developed petals, as in Amherstia, but there are from ten to fifteen stamens, free or monadelphous to a variable height. The flowers of Broionea are united at the ends of the branches in splendid short spikes or heads, each flower axillary to a coloured petal and bract. The bractlets, united edge to edge for a considerable distance, form a long sheath, from which t-stock-foto
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. The natural history of plants. Botany. Fig. 297. Flower ®. Fig. 298. Long. sect, of flower. The leaves are opposite, very rarely verticillate, accompanied by intrapetiolar stipules most frequently connate in a sheath. The flowers,^ varying much in appearance, are rarely terminal, and more generally axillary, solitary or in cymes, with longer or shorter pedicels or even none. In the Genipas named Griffithia,^ often spinous or climbing, the flowers, small in figure, are in coryinbiform cymes, and the tube of the hypocrateriform corolla is generally longer than the lobes. They are plants of tro-stock-foto
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. Cunningham's Text-book of anatomy. Anatomy. Flexor muscles Lacertus fibrosus Medial epicondyle Brachialis Ulnar nerve | Medial intermuscular septum Median nerve Medial head of triceps Long head of triceps Lower border of teres major' Posterior axillary fold Fig. 1112.—Axilla, Inner Aspect of Arm and Elbow. all the axillary lymph glands, and, as far as possible, all the fat and fascia, including the sheath of the axillary vein. It must be remembered that the distal part of the axillary vein lies immediately underneath the deep fascia of the lateral wall of the axilla; in clean- ing the medial-stock-foto
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. A dictionary of the flowering plants and ferns. Botany. 574 RUBIACEAE and are frequently united to one another and to the petioles, so that a sheath is formed round the stem. The two slips.—one from each I. —that stand side by side are usu. united, and in the Galieae, to which the Brit. sp. belong, are leaf-like, and often as large as the ordinary 1.; a char, appearance is thus produced, the plants seeming to have whorls of 1.; and it is only by noting the axillary buds that a clue is obtained to the real state of affairs. The number of organs—1. and slips. —in a whorl varies from 4 upwards,-stock-foto
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. The natural history of plants. Botany. â LEGUMmOSJE-CJESALFINIEJE. 97 Brownea^ (figs. 70-72) has features of all the preceding genera. They have still the same receptacle, calyx, fruit, ami seeds; the corolla consists of five well developed petals, as in Amherstia, but there are from ten to fifteen stamens, free or monadelphous to a variable height. The flowers of Broionea are united at the ends of the branches in splendid short spikes or heads, each flower axillary to a coloured petal and bract. The bractlets, united edge to edge for a considerable distance, form a long sheath, from which t-stock-foto
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. The natural history of plants. Botany. Fig. 297. Flower ®. Fig. 298. Long. sect, of flower. The leaves are opposite, very rarely verticillate, accompanied by intrapetiolar stipules most frequently connate in a sheath. The flowers,^ varying much in appearance, are rarely terminal, and more generally axillary, solitary or in cymes, with longer or shorter pedicels or even none. In the Genipas named Griffithia,^ often spinous or climbing, the flowers, small in figure, are in coryinbiform cymes, and the tube of the hypocrateriform corolla is generally longer than the lobes. They are plants of tro-stock-foto
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. Cunningham's Text-book of anatomy. Anatomy. Flexor muscles Lacertus fibrosus Medial epicondyle Brachialis Ulnar nerve | Medial intermuscular septum Median nerve Medial head of triceps Long head of triceps Lower border of teres major' Posterior axillary fold Fig. 1112.—Axilla, Inner Aspect of Arm and Elbow. all the axillary lymph glands, and, as far as possible, all the fat and fascia, including the sheath of the axillary vein. It must be remembered that the distal part of the axillary vein lies immediately underneath the deep fascia of the lateral wall of the axilla; in clean- ing the medial-stock-foto