Book
1 1| from the kidneys into the bladder,and which are called ureters;
2 1| several times, until the bladder seems to themto have become
3 1| the interior cavity of the bladder increases insize, the thinner,
4 1| thenthey would make the bladder big in the same way that
5 1| from each kidneyinto the bladder, and from this arrangement
6 1| region between kidneys and bladder as the stonetraversed the
7 1| presence of urine in the bladder,and one is forced to marvel
8 1| we drink passes into the bladder by being resolved into vapours,
9 1| He simply looks upon the bladder as a sponge or a piece of
10 1| more imperviousthan the bladder, and this is why it keeps
11 1| out the vapours, whilethe bladder admits them." Yet if he
12 1| that the outer coat of the bladder springs from the peritoneum
13 1| which is peculiar to the bladder, is more than twice as thick
14 1| but the situation of the bladder, which is the reason for
15 1| yet the situationof the bladder would be enough in itself
16 1| before they came to the bladder. ~ ~But why do I mention
17 1| mention the situation of the bladder, peritoneum, and thorax?
18 1| any day in thecase of any bladder, that, if one fills it with
19 1| out through these whenthe bladder was squeezed, in the same
20 1| why liquid canenter the bladder through the ureters, but
21 1| becoming implanted in the bladder, evenhad the audacity to
22 1| inserted into the neck of the bladder and not into its cavity.
23 1| ductsentering the neck of the bladder lower down than the ureters,
24 1| outthrough the ureters into the bladder; even thus we hardly hoped
25 1| external bandages and shows the bladder empty and the ureters quite
26 1| one then plainly sees the bladder becoming filled withurine. ~ ~
27 1| receivingback the urine from the bladder. These observations having
28 1| theother to discharge into the bladder. Allowing, then, some time
29 1| itselfflaccid, but has filled the bladder with urine. Then, again,
30 1| takes off the bandages; the bladder will now be found empty,
31 1| nothing regurgitates from the bladder into the ureters, I thinkhe
32 1| channelsopening into the bladder. It was, of course, a grand
33 1| vena cava, to collectin the bladder. ~ ~Like slaves, then, caught
34 2| through the kidneys into the bladder by one method, the blood
35 2| previously said about the bladder which the children blew
36 2| the urine passes into the bladder in a vaporous state, as
37 2| by the spleen and by the bladder beside the liver, and a
38 3| been already shown that the bladder by the liver draws bile
39 3| we do not find. For the bladder is sometimes observed to
40 3| the case with the other bladder - that which receives the
41 3| observe that the urinary bladder continues to collect urine
42 3| resemble the uterus or the bladder as regards the arrangement
43 3| the uterus and the urinary bladder; this latter also may be
44 3| however, in the case of the bladder alongside the liver, whence
45 3| as well as to the urinary bladder, that there is either some
46 3| performs the neck of the bladder which is beside the liver,
47 3| both fills and empties the bladder. Similarly the canal of
48 3| this faculty but also the bladder by the liver, and the kidneys
49 3| uterus, the stomach and the bladder by the liver carry out attraction
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