Philosophers have calculated the motion of fluids, where their particles are successively displaced, as in the course of a river; but they have paid less attention to that brisk motion of the whole or of the mass, if I may so say, that takes place in canals in which they are enclosed on all sides, and are acted upon at one extremity.

Remarks upon the Pulse.

Two things are already evidently proved, viz. 1st, that the heart is the peculiar agent of the arterial motion, and that the arteries are almost passive in this motion; 2d, that it consists in a general impulse suddenly experienced by the whole mass of red blood, felt at the same time at the extremities and in the trunks, and not in a successive progression of a wave or undulation that goes from the left ventricle. It remains for me to examine how the heart produces the pulse by this brisk and instantaneous motion. There is still much to be elucidated upon this point; but we cannot deny that the locomotion of the arterial system does much in this phenomenon. At the instant the mass of blood is driven thus from the heart towards the extremities, by a motion of the whole, if we may so say, it tends inevitably to straighten the arteries, especially when they are tortuous. This straightening necessarily produces a locomotion, which causes the pulsation of the artery.

As to the dilatation, it is hardly any thing in an ordinary state; however if you press a little upon an artery, the blood makes an effort to dilate it and this effort increases the sensation of the pulse; Jadelot thought that it alone constituted it. On the other hand, if much blood enters the arterial system at the instant of the contraction of the heart; if a resistance exists in the general capillary system, the arteries can be also dilated, but it is not their return upon themselves or contraction that drives the blood into the capillaries; this return is subsequent. In fact, at the instant of contraction, the blood enters on the one part into the arteries in going from the ventricle, and goes on the other to enter the capillary system; these two phenomena take place at the same time, since they arise from the same impulse. Then when there is a contraction in the artery, a motion which is only the contractility of texture put into action, this contraction does not drive the blood; but it takes place, because the blood has been driven into the capillary system at the instant of the contraction; it is because the artery ceases to be distended, that it returns upon itself or contracts, and not because it is actually distended. Hence how the arterial contraction can alternate with that of the left ventricle; but it is not in the sense that authors have understood it. There are then two periods in the motion of the red blood; 1st, contraction of the ventricle; slight dilatation of the arterial system by the blood that enters it; general locomotion; passage into the capillary system of a portion of this red blood; all these phenomena happen at the same time; it is the period when the pulse is felt; it is that of the diastole. 2d. In the next period, the ventricle is relaxed to fill itself anew; less full of blood, the arteries contract a little upon themselves; all take the place they had lost during the locomotion; this is the period of the systole, a period purely passive, while some have thought it a very active one for the arteries.

As but little blood is driven at each pulsation out of the ventricle, which does not wholly empty itself; and as, on the other hand, at the same time it enters the arteries it goes out from the side opposite to the heart, the arterial dilatation and, consequently, contraction, are almost nothing; thus, they cannot be perceived. Besides, if the contraction really took place, it would hardly be apparent; for when it is the contractility of texture that is in action, it produces a slow insensible motion, a real tightening; whereas contraction, the effect of irritability is abrupt, instantaneous, and produces a motion that the eye always distinguishes.

I cannot insist too much upon this fact, which is certain, viz. that if there is a slight contraction in the arteries at the instant the pulse ceases to beat, it is not that they have contracted to drive the blood, but merely that they contract upon themselves, because the blood that has gone into the capillaries prevents their being sufficiently dilated; it is contractility for the want of extension. Hence why the throws of arterial blood going from an open artery, correspond with the dilatation of these vessels, and the weakening of the throw with their contraction, which would be entirely the reverse, according to the common opinion.

The dilatation and contraction of the arteries being almost nothing in the ordinary state, it appears that the peculiar cause of the pulse is, as Weitbreck has observed, in the locomotion of the arteries, a locomotion that is general and instantaneous in the whole system, and not consecutive, as this author has understood it. I shall not relate here the proofs of this locomotion; they can be found every where. I would observe only, that it is so manifest in living animals, that when we have often examined the circulation by their means, it is impossible to doubt its reality.

Different causes can make the pulse vary; these causes are, 1st, relative to the heart, almost the only agent of impulse; thus its sensible organic contractility, increased, diminished, altered sympathetically or in any other way, can make it with the same stimulus contract quicker, slower, or more irregularly than common; thus the diseases of its organization inevitably alter its motion. 2d. The blood charged with different natural or morbific substances is a stimulant more or less capable of putting in play the motion of the heart. 3d. The general capillary system, according as it receives a greater or less quantity of blood, or refuses admission to that which the arteries send there, &c. produces necessarily numerous varieties in the pulse. There are but few causes relative to the arteries themselves.

If now we consider the great number of causes that can be referred to these three principal heads, we shall cease to wonder at the prodigious variety that the pulse exhibits in health, and especially in diseases. Besides, I shall not examine here in its whole extent the question concerning the pulse; it is sufficient to have announced the principles; I shall hereafter develop the consequences, which are, as we know, of the greatest importance to the physician. We see by the different views that I have presented, that almost all authors have described in an inaccurate manner the motion of the blood, and what loose ideas they have had of it. Experiments have only served to confuse them; it is a work that requires to be entirely done again, either with the materials that many respectable authors have already amassed, especially Haller, Spallanzani, Weitbreck, Lamure, Jadelot, &c. or with new facts. I have only presented the first bases of this work.

We have seen how favourable the firm and elastic structure of the arterial texture is to the locomotion of the arteries, and the influence the curves of these vessels have upon it. I will add that the loose union that they form with the neighbouring parts, and their uniform position in the cellular texture, singularly favour this locomotion.