It is the diversity in the structure of the capillaries, according to the organs in which they are found, which has an essential influence upon the difference which the vital properties exhibit, particularly the organic sensibility and the insensible organic contractility in each system in which we examine them; hence peculiar modifications in all those diseases over which these properties preside, and which are seated especially in the capillaries, such as inflammations, tumours, hemorrhages, &c. &c.
The difference in structure of the capillary system, sometimes becomes manifest to the eye. Thus the spleen, the corpus cavernosum, instead of presenting, like the serous surfaces, a vascular net-work in which the blood oscillates in different directions, according to the motion it receives, exhibit only spongy, cancellated textures, whose nature is but little known, in which the blood appears often to stagnate, instead of moving, &c.
VIII. Of the Circulation of the Capillaries.
The circulatory phenomena are of two kinds in the capillary system: 1st, there is the motion of the fluids; 2d, the alterations which they undergo.
Motion of the Fluids in the Capillary System.
These fluids are, 1st, the blood; 2d, others differing from it in their composition, though we only know their differences of appearance. Let us examine the laws of the motion of each kind.
The blood, after it has entered the capillary system, is evidently beyond the influence of the heart, and only circulates by that of the tonic forces, or the insensible contractility of the part. If we examine the phenomena of this capillary system but little, we shall be easily convinced of this truth, which Bordeu first taught. The capillary system is really the boundary, beyond which the influence of the heart does not extend. Hence why all the vessels that go out of this system, exhibit in the fluid they contain a motion that does not correspond with that of the arteries that go to it. 1st. After what we have said, there is no doubt of this, as it regards the veins. 2d. It is also true as it respects the excretories. The increase of secretions does not correspond with the increase of the action of the heart, nor does their diminution with the diminution of the pulsations. Who does not know, on the contrary, that often in a violent paroxysm of fever, in which the agitation of the arterial blood is very great, all the glands seem to shut up their ducts and not to pour out any fluid? 3d. It is the same with all the exhalations; it is not when a fever is the greatest, that we sweat the most, but when it is somewhat diminished. Hemorrhages are evidently but an exhalation; now who does not know, that the pulse is often very weak, when the blood flows abundantly from the mucous surfaces of the womb, the nostrils, the bronchia, &c.? Who does not know on the contrary that in extreme agitations of the heart, most often the blood does not flow by the exhalants? Is the quickness of the pulse increased during menstruation? It is the redness of the capillary system, the abundance of the blood of this system, which is often, as I have said, the forerunner of active hemorrhages; but it is never the increase of the action of the heart. Oftentimes fungous tumours, soft flesh that shoots up in wounds of a bad nature, polypi, &c. pour out blood; the heart has nothing to do with these hemorrhages, they come evidently from the capillary system. Who does not know, that frequently when the exhalants pour out copiously serous fluids upon the membrane of that name, in the production of dropsies, the heart is, like all the other parts, in a state of real inertia?
Since then all the vessels going from the capillary system exhibit in their motions no sort of harmony with those of the heart, it is evident that the influence of this organ is interrupted, is terminated at the capillary system.
Observe nutrition; it is clearly the capillary system that distributes everywhere the materials that it has received by the impulse of the heart; now the influence of this does not extend to the place where the nutritive matter is deposited. In fact, its impulse everywhere equal and uniform, pushes the blood with nearly an equal force to all parts, with some exceptions in the fœtus. Now nutrition is on the contrary extremely unequal; at one age, it is one part that takes more increase, consequently receives more nutritive matter; at another age, it is another organ. This inequality, is the first and principal phenomenon of growth.
How can we reconcile with the sole and uniform impulse of the heart in all parts, inflammation, the production of herpes, of different eruptions, &c. which appear in some places? Would inflammation exhibit so many aspects, according to the system it seizes, if the heart alone presided over its development? All the difference between catarrh, erysipelas, phlegmon, &c. would disappear; and there would be only what arose from being nearer, or further from the heart.