Page:Plates illustrating the natural and morbid changes of the human eye.djvu/16

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EXPLANATION OF PLATES.

and sclerotic in the region of the yellow spot of the eye, the outlines of which are represented in Fig. 8.

Fig. 10.

Two parallel lines indicating the conjoined thickness of the retina, choroid, and sclerotic in the equatorial region of the eye, represented in Fig. 8.

Fig. 11.

Bound and angular yellowish transparent granules, found in the fluid which occupied the space between the retina and displaced hyaloid membrane of the eye represented in Fig. 8.

Fig. 12.

Capillary vessels (× 350) of the retina of a myopic eye.

(1.) Black pigment granules and fat globules. These occupied some parts of the vessels, in others blood corpuscles were visible. Fig. 13.

Fig. 13.

A healthy capillary vessel of the retina (× 270).

Morbidly altered retinal capillaries are represented (× 270) in Figs. 14, 15, 16, 17, 18.

Fig. 14.

From a suppurating retina.

(1.) Unequally dilated capillary vessels.

(2.) (?) " Colloid globes."

Fig. 15.

From an atrophic retina.

(1.) Unequally dilated capillary vessel.

(2.) Black pigment spot.

The pigment spots were found beneath the hyaloid membrane, upon the vessels of the retina.

Figs. 16, 17, 18.

Capillary vessels from different parts of the same atrophic retina.