MEDULLARY SYSTEM.
Though the medullary system is only met with in the bones, and though its principal uses appear to relate entirely to them, yet its properties and life differ so much from the properties and life of these organs, that we are compelled to examine them in a separate manner.
We distinguish two kinds of medullary systems; one occupies the texture of the cells of the extremities of the long bones, and the whole of the interior of the short and flat bones; the other is found only in the middle part of the first; let us examine each separately.
ARTICLE FIRST.
MEDULLARY SYSTEM OF THE FLAT AND SHORT BONES, AND THE EXTREMITIES OF THE LONG ONES.
I. Origin and Conformation.
This system appears to be the expansion of the vessels which penetrate the bones through the foramina of the second order, that is to say, through those that go to the common texture of the cells. These vessels having arrived on the internal surface of the cells, divide ad infinitum and anastomose in a thousand ways. Their interlacing gives to the interior of the texture of the cells that red appearance that characterises it, and which is so much the more evident, as it is examined at an age nearer infancy, because in fact the vascular system which is very evident at this period, becomes contracted and effaced as we recede from it.
These are the vessels which, in the section of the bones of the cranium by the trephine, give to the saw-dust the redness that is observed. It is these that produce the same phenomenon in the amputation of the extremity of the limbs. Though in general they remain loaded with blood at the moment of death, yet we can, as I have often done, accumulate in them still more by fine injections, which drive before them that which is found in the vessels, and concentrate it at their extremities; then the spongy texture of the adult is almost as red as that of the child which has not been prepared.
II. Organization.
Authors speak of a delicate membrane that lines the interior of all the osseous cells, and which they consider to be the exhalant organ of the medullary fluid. I have never been able, though my researches have been numerous, to discover a similar membrane. We see only the vascular elongations of which I have spoken, which, greatly multiplied, appear in fact to form a membrane, but when examined attentively are found to be very distinct from each other, not continuous, except at the place of the anastomoses, and leaving between them many small spaces in which the bone is not covered, but is in contact with the medullary fluid.