ARTICLE THIRD.
PROPERTIES OF THE MUCOUS SYSTEM.
I. Properties of Texture.
Extensibility and contractility are much less in this system than they at first appear to be, on account of the numerous folds which it exhibits in the hollow organs during their contraction, folds which are developed only during extension, as we have seen. Yet these two properties become very evident in some cases. The excretories are capable of taking a size much larger than is natural to them. This is seen in the ureters in particular, which are sometimes found as large as an intestine. The ductus choledochus and the pancreatic duct have often also these dilatations. The urethra and the salivary ducts appear to be less extensible than the others. If they have ever so little obstacles from strictures, contractions, &c. they break rather than stretch; hence various urinary and salivary fistulas.
Hence there is, as we see, many varieties in the degrees of the extensibility of the mucous system; it is the same with regard to the contractility of texture. These two properties are besides capable of being put rapidly into action. We know that the stomach, the intestines, the bladder, &c. pass in an instant from a great size to extreme contraction. Their functions even suppose this rapidity, without which they could not be performed. The palatine membrane which lines the cheeks, exhibits the same phenomenon when the mouth is filled with air, aliments, &c. which are afterwards expelled from it.
When the usual fluids cease to pass through the mucous ducts, they remain in permanent contraction; this is what takes place in the intestines below a preternatural anus. I have seen in this case the cæcum and the rectum reduced to the size of a large quill. Yet there is never then an obliteration of their parietes, on account of the presence of the mucous juices, of which the patient always passes a certain quantity. The urethra, after the operations for stone in which the urine passes for a long time through the wound, and in the great fistulas in the perineum or above the pubis, the salivary ducts in wounds which affect them and through which the whole saliva is discharged, the nasal canal in fistulæ lachrymales, contract also more or less, but are never obliterated. We know that the vas deferens is often a very long time without having semen pass through it, and yet it remains open. This phenomenon distinguishes the mucous ducts from the arterial, which, when the course of blood is interrupted in them, change into ligaments in which every thing like a canal disappears. We ought not to lose sight of this phenomenon of all the mucous ducts; it proves the incorrectness of the practice of those who, thinking that at the end of some time it is impossible to re-establish, in fistulas, the natural way, think it necessary to make an artificial one.
The mucous tubes are not only not obliterated when they are empty, but when inflamed they do not even contract adhesions of their parietes, as so often happens in the serous cavities, in the cellular texture, &c. Observe how important this fact is to the great functions of life; what would indeed become of these functions, if in catarrhs of the intestines, the bladder, the stomach, the œsophagus, the excretories, &c. these adhesions were as frequent as they are in pleurisy, peritonitis, pericarditis, &c.
II. Vital Properties.
Few systems live in a more active manner than this; few exhibit the vital forces in a higher degree.