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Show 0f the Kit/new. 43,76 Book I. Part Ill, piny them, in forming Arches alter the manner of Network, and the Bran" of [er Veins and Arteries, being conioyned, according to greater and 121% Divarications, do make larger or liualler Circumferences in the manner of Circles, till they land near the inward Coat of the Kidney, where they ' mike their Terminations in its red parts. And it may be worthy our remark that both the Capillary Veins and :711i. bib r51}. Arteries, do always allociate and intermingle with the Urinary Units 1-) which are lirblervient t0 the more noble Veflels, in point of Depuration of divnritr the "the tmn ol the per region of the Kidney; and as theli: Urinary Ducts do tend toward li' iv f it, they are more and more fruitful in Branches, and at laft 7.: .. 3:21;: SingaEillaries, not making their progrcls in altraight courle, but in to the overmany Circumvolutions in the form of Arches, to give a check {evened m perfcé‘tly be not {liould it left Liquor, quick pallaqe of the Serous the body of the Glands, before it is received into the roots of the Urinary Extrcamities are lodged in the external parts of the Kidney 1-, near each h other, as fiibfervient to the main end ( lor which they vvfo‘stfptiiiade)f tiic tHl‘Cting of it, this Experiment may be tried, ol Injecting foine deeply tin. ged Liquor into the Emulgcnt Artery, and then you may dilcover, not only the fiiblhmceoi'theKidney to be Turnefied, but allo the Injected Liquor to tlell'il out of the Fxtreamitics of the Capillary Arteries, inferted into the ambient parts of the Kidney, when its Coats are [tripped of}: And to give a more clear account, how the Blood VclTels do allociate with each other in the body of the Kidneys, this may be obfervablc, That the and all the" the Arteries, Veins, Nerves, and Urinary Ducts, do terminate, rn ‘anfCC-og [ e depuration of the Blood; the Arteries bring. it intoitfiic t 'mp‘ecrciGlands, the Nerves tranlinit a Fermentative Liquor, ipoDingiti tion, the Veins receive the refined Blood, and the Urinary , uc s ineGIecét meuts fevered from it: So that tliefe various Vcflels, compoling t c an s, s 115Oper- are [0 many Auxiliaries, that mutually contribute their endeavour peAnima and Vital the of cxercrfo the to order in Blood, the of fetftive rations. I The Pelvis may be called a Cillei-n +, into which the Urinary Ducts dill Arteries and Veins ( covered with a common Integument) do in their pro- in charge their dreams of Urine, as into a common Receptacleli tr islfeaéed grefs emit many Branches, Ramulets, and Capillaries, which are carried into \fitiicbi t 19 Nyltcrc. the moi} inward recedes of the Kidney, as a Center through the fubf‘tance of the Glands, in a Circular manner 3 in which (faith e {tit fa ‘ an; tory Vellhls are conjoyned : This great Cav1ty is nothing 6 is 1hint)1'6 Hysteria? the of expanfion the from g proceedin Sinus, branous 13g eCCI." omLWllMir s, Appendage Tubulary more or Ten, with Einht or C( (Emma/‘4, Pipes civered with Glandulous, or Carnous fiibflances, cad épngft: Papillam, of the bignels of a. PeaZ fom/ewhat flat abov)e,ogr:herritiiiifl into Cd bud" d. . recleptiivc {carce \ ns Perforatio lmall neath, which have d 101 h fl is late 00‘. B the of H00) through which the \Vatry Particles t c "all: thevl'elvis. So that the Blood is lecerned in-the Parcnciyigabo ({y :gtinnBian: from its ferous Impurities, which are immediately conveye d.. an .kg table company of 1" oots of Minute Capillaries, to greater ~ ' s , lmi'ne 1 . Trun . or Twelve ches which do coalelce below into Ten ately , tranfinitting the Urinary, Rivulets into the PclVlH, as Into a common and lei} Circles, or rather Malhes of Network, as they are not perfectly Round, but have Lorne Angles or other, accompanying this fine Network of the Blood Veilcls, which is full of Wonder and Beauty. The Nerves of the Kidneys, are propagated from the lower Mefenterick Flex, and from two other Vertebral Nerves, which do enter into the Kidiieys, and aflociate with the Emulgent Arteries, as they pals through the fubflance of thefe Bowels, and do terminate into the body of thek: Glands, with innumerable Fibres lodged in the Ambient parts of the Kidneys. The prime ufeof thcfe Nerves (asl firppofe) is to impart a Juice meeting with the Vital Liquor, with which it is embodied in the Interfiices of the Vellels, infpiring it with volatil, laline, and {Pirituous Particles, much enobling the Blood. 7 The fecond me of the Nerves, relating to the Kidneys, is to tranlmit a Liquor into their Glands, asa Ferment to help the fecretion of the {Erollsa from the noble parts of the Blood, by a kind of precipitation, which are élf'tcl'Ward‘rcceived into the Extreamities or" the Veins, and the watry Recrements', into' the Roots of tlic‘Urihary Ducts and Pelvis. la cations of Arteries and Veins) difiributed into the lower, middle, and up- with a Knife, after the Lune manner, as the Parenchyma of the liver is Doélor Ii'igbmore) they i'elemble the Cells of a Hony Comb, and are fra- med, as I apprehend, alter this manner: The Divarications of Arterial Eranches and Capillaries, making divers Semicircles, do meet the Branches and Capillaries of Veins, wheeling after the fame model with the Arteries; and the Arches of Arteries and Veins being united, do make many great (7'. to. 1*. i. 4-77 w Bit/i4. Dthliel‘e Excretory Veflels ( firl‘t dil‘covercd by Learned Bartholome chim) do accompany the Arteries and \‘eins, all along the lubflaiice of the which Kidney, from the Papillary Catuiicles, to the Ambient'parts, into Arrericsnnay be difcerned in the Kidneys of large Bruits: For the more clearly Tit Ur nary 0f the IQa'myr. the Blood. And the manner how the Fibrous parts are interlperfcd with the Blood \rlellels, is loiiiewbat obi-cure, but the Capillary Veins and Arteries, may be more clearly feet] in their Divarications, formed into greater and linaller Arches; if the Fibrous parts of the Kidney be gently taken away lbfily removed, and then the greater and linaller Branches of the Veins and fl'Cé of r' :Blood \ chm. BookI. Part III. The l follrtll fort bf V‘eflh‘ls arc the Urinary Du'éts +, an infinite number of Mcmbranous Tubes, like other Ekctetory VeITels, in fubflance and rife, which have their Trunks and greater Branches near the San'IlS part of the Kidney, where they 'arc'iéx‘v‘efl, and‘of ' eatel't Dimenfions, and after- \vard are" divided inlto'inany Branches ( in vvfich they refemble the Divancation Attribute, Lalflflie Glands of the Kidney 1-, may claim to themfclves a great and Bowel, as colatorics of the Blood, this uleful . r‘me upsarts .ffllsuhero V Signirtil andoffmall. feared in the ambient parts fif [hele'l‘llney' Beet es, \i rim :1er adorned with a brighter Red then the more inward The Glands or tthidncys. l7. Io. I". i. I. b. T. i I. an 1111, ate t it: of a deeper hue, and are adapted to thlc Urinary Ducts, which integi ‘ of this Bowe . ' Glaffes, they The" '" r of gmAtseil) It'liihirolgigltIICrCEOEZ/far as can be dilcovered by the help of the Eggsfif the( [he Kitln :3‘5. hng fecm to be round, or of an Oval (hape, lbmewhatrelhmb crow?) anchl Filli, and are appendant to the tops of Veflels, which they Arteries g.:1 at) onio~ Fruit‘7 and have fuch connexion with the Branches of their ID i esd $1141times they are affixed to their outfides, and othertimes to (aSlLlcjmc 1mm evrdent made be may This s. paqated into many Ramulet d Eux'mries colourec deep a of n pitibiws hath obferved) by the immillio 1 t e, fr [hat the Emulgent Arter , whereupon the appendant Glands, an our , o Co deep lime the With tinged are afined) are (to which they Gggggg we The connczi» on or the Glands. |