ARTICLE THIRD.
PROPERTIES OF THE FIBROUS SYSTEM.

I. Physical Properties.

The fibrous system has but a slight degree of elasticity in the natural state; but when its different organs are taken from the body and dried, they acquire it very considerably; thus the tendons, the aponeurotic expansions, &c. which in a fresh state would be incapable of any vibration, are found to resound in instruments when they are very dry.

II. Properties of Texture.

The properties of texture are evident in the fibrous system, but they are less so than in many others.

Extensibility is seen in the dura-mater, in hydrocephalus, in the periosteum; in the different enlargements of which the bones are susceptible; in the aponeuroses, in the swelling of the extremities, and the distension of the abdominal parietes, which, as we know, are aponeurotic as well as fleshy; in the fibrous capsules, in articular dropsies; in the tunica sclerotica and albuginea in the swelling of their respective organs.

This extensibility of the fibrous system is subjected to an uniform law, which is unknown to the extensibility of most of the other systems; it can only take place in a slow, gradual and insensible manner. Thus when it is too quickly put into action, two different phenomena take place, which equally suppose the impossibility of its extending suddenly, as for example, a muscle, the skin, the cellular texture, &c. do. 1st. If the fibrous organ makes a resistance greater than the effort which it experiences, then it does not yield, and different accidents result from it. We have many examples of this, in the inflammatory swellings that appear under the aponeuroses of the limbs, under those of the cranium, within the fibrous sheaths of the tendons, &c. Then these fibrous organs not being able to stretch with the same rapidity as the subjacent parts which swell, compress painfully these swollen parts, and sometimes even expose them to gangrene; this is what takes place in those strangulations so frequent in surgical practice, and which require different operations to relieve them. 2d. If the fibrous organ is inferior in its resistance to the sudden effort which it experiences, it breaks instead of yielding; hence the rupture of the tendons, the tearing of the fibrous capsules and of the ligaments in luxations, that of the aponeuroses in certain very rare cases reported by different authors, &c. &c. We easily understand that the great resistance with which the fibrous texture is endowed, is principally owing to the impossibility of yielding suddenly to the impulse that is given to it.

In the slow and gradual extension of the fibrous organs, we observe that often instead of becoming thinner and enlarging at the expense of their thickness, they increase, on the contrary, in this dimension. The albuginea of a scirrhous testicle, the sclerotica of a dropsical or cancerous eye, the periosteum of a ricketty bone, &c. show us this phenomenon, the reverse of which is sometimes observed, as in the distensions of the abdominal aponeuroses produced by pregnancy, by ascites, and also in hydrocephalus, &c.

The contractility of texture is accommodated in the fibrous system, to the degree of its extensibility; as it cannot suddenly be distended, it cannot suddenly contract when it ceases to be distended. This fact is remarkable in the division of a tendon, of a portion of aponeurosis, of a ligament laid bare in a living animal, in an incision of the dura-mater, to discharge blood effused under it, &c. In all these cases, the edges of the division undergo a separation hardly perceptible; thus in the rupture of the tendons, the separation being produced, not by the contraction of the divided extremities, but only by the motions of the limb, the contact is effected by the position in which in the natural state this tendon is not drawn: whilst in a divided muscle, not only this position is necessary, but that in which there is the greatest possible relaxation, and yet oftentimes contact is not effected. If whilst a muscle is stretched, we cut its tendon in a living animal, the end attached to the fleshy fibres separates a little from the other by the retraction of these fibres; but that which is attached to the bone remains immoveable, so that there is then but one cause of separation to this, whereas there are two in a divided fleshy part. If we cut a tendon when the muscle is relaxed, its ends remain in place.

The contractility of texture is evident, however, at the end of some time, in the fibrous system, especially when the organ has been first stretched; for, when it is divided in its natural state, it is always hardly any thing. The sclerotica after the puncture of the eye, or after the amputation of the anterior half of this organ, and the evacuation of its humours, the tunica albuginea, the peculiar coat of the spleen and that of the kidney, after the resolution of a tumour that had stretched their respective organs, the fibrous capsules after the discharge of the fluid of articular dropsies, the abdominal aponeuroses after the first and even the second accouchement, the periosteum after the resolution of exostoses, &c. gradually contract and resume their original forms.