III. Difference of the Exhalations.
Though we know not what is the structure of the exhalants, yet we cannot doubt but that this structure differs remarkably in the different systems. Observe in fact that these vessels enter, as it were, like elements into the textures they compose, and that consequently they must necessarily partake of the different and distinctive characters which these textures exhibit.
It is to this difference that we must refer without doubt what we see in injections. They go out, if they are fine, by the mucous, serous and even cellular exhalants; but those which furnish the synovia, transmit them with much more difficulty; it is the same in the capillary system; whilst the serous surfaces in this system are filled with great ease, and blackened by injections, as it were at will, the synovial surfaces are penetrated with much more difficulty.
ARTICLE SECOND.
PROPERTIES, FUNCTIONS, AND DEVELOPMENT OF THE EXHALANT SYSTEM.
I. Properties.
The vessels of the exhalant system are too delicate to allow us to analyze their properties of texture. Do they enlarge when the red globules enter them? I am wholly ignorant. Haller, who admitted that there were exhalants, thought that white fluids alone entered them, because their diameter was disproportioned to that of the red globules. This opinion is also that of the school of Boerhaave. Who has ever measured comparatively the respective diameters of the vessels and the particles of the fluids? All such expressions, as fine fluids, coarse fluids, &c. which are still used by many physicians, have originated from this theory and are still used, though the theory itself has been admitted to be false. I have said twenty times, and I again repeat it, that the only cause which prevents the red globules from passing into vessels with white fluids, is the want of relation between the nature of the fluid and the sensibility of the organ.
The properties of animal life have evidently no connexion with the exhalants. Of those of organic life, they have in the highest degree those of organic sensibility and the corresponding insensible contractility; it is upon these that all their functions depend.
Characters of the Vital Properties.
Though organic sensibility is everywhere given to the exhalants, it varies however remarkably in each system; that of the mucous exhalants is not the same as that of the serous. In general the exhalants entering as it were like elements into the texture of each system, partake completely of the organic properties of that system; or rather their properties are the same. Hence, 1st, why each separates the fluid that is peculiar to it; why consequently, when much water is introduced into the circulation by drinking, the cutaneous exhalants, and never the serous, appropriate it to themselves, and transmit it out of the blood; when we run much and a general agitation is consequently given by the heart to the mass of blood in circulation, the cutaneous exhalants, being more powerfully excited by this impression than the serous, the synovial, &c. separate more sweat; 2d, why the serous do not pour out fat, the medullary serum, &c. though the mass of blood that enters the capillaries that are continuous with these exhalants, is everywhere the same; 3d, why when the exhalants pour out fluids that they are not accustomed to, or when their natural fluids are altered, these fluids differ essentially from each other; why, for example, after inflammation, it is only upon the serous surfaces that we see a milky serum; why nothing resembling pus flows from the inflamed medullary membrane; why the fluids, the result of the inflammation of the synovial membranes, are very different from those that the serous surfaces produce, &c.; 4th, why certain exhalants have a much greater tendency than others to admit blood and pour it out upon their respective surfaces, of which we see an example in the mucous exhalants, which are so disposed to suffer this fluid to pass, that a thousand circumstances occasion hemorrhages from them; 5th, why among the mucous exhalants themselves, some have a much greater tendency than other to permit the blood to pass, &c. &c.