Harvey CHAPTER
XIII THE
THIRD POSITION IS CONFIRMED: Thus far we have spoken
of the quantity of blood passing through the heart and the lungs in the
centre of the body, and in like manner from the arteries into the veins in
the peripheral parts and the body at large. We have yet to explain,
however, in what manner the blood finds its way back to the heart from the
extremities by the veins, and how and in what way these are the only
vessels that convey the blood from the external to the central parts;
which done, I conceive that the three fundamental propositions laid down
for the circulation of the blood will be so plain, so well established, so
obviously true, that they may claim general credence. Now the remaining
position will be made sufficiently clear from the valves which are found
in the cavities of the veins themselves, from the uses of these, and from
experiments cognizable by the senses. The
celebrated Hieronymus Fabricius of Aquapendente, a most skillful
anatomist, and venerable old man, or, as the learned Riolan will have it,
Jacobus Silvius, first gave representations of the valves in the veins,
which consist of raised or loose portions of the inner membranes of these
vessels, of extreme delicacy, and a sigmoid or semilunar shape. They are
situated at different distances from one another, and diversely in
different individuals; they are connate at the sides of the veins; they
are directed upwards or towards the trunks of the veins; the two—for
there are for the most part two together—regard each other, mutually
touch, and are so ready to come into contact by their edges, that if
anything attempt to pass from the trunks into the branches of the veins,
or from the greater vessels into the less, they completely prevent it;
they are farther so arranged, that the horns of those that succeed are
opposite the middle of the convexity of those that precede, and so on
alternately. The
discoverer of these valves did not rightly understand their use, nor have
succeeding anatomists added anything to our knowledge: for their office is
by no means explained when we are told that it is to hinder the blood, by
its weight, from all flowing into inferior parts; for the edges of the
valves in the jugular veins hang downwards, and are so contrived that they
prevent the blood from rising upwards; the valves, in a word, do not
invariably look upwards, but always towards the trunks of the veins,
invariably towards the seat of the heart. I, and indeed others, have
sometimes found valves in the emulgent veins, and in those of the
mesentery, the edges of which were directed towards the vena cava and vena
portae. Let it be added that there are no valves in the arteries, and that
dogs, oxen, etc., have invariably valves at the divisions of their crural
veins, in the veins that meet towards the top of the os sacrum, and in
those branches which come from the haunches, in which no such effect of
gravity from the erect position was to be apprehended. Neither are there
valves in the jugular veins for the purpose of guarding against apoplexy,
as some have said; because in sleep the head is more apt to be influenced
by the contents of the carotid arteries. Neither are the valves present in
order that the blood may be retained in the divarications or smaller
trunks and minuter branches, and not be suffered to flow entirely into the
more open and capacious channels; for they occur where there are no
divarications; although it must be owned that they are most frequent at
the points where branches join. Neither do they exist for the purpose of
rendering the current of blood more slow from the centre of the body; for
it seems likely that the blood would be disposed to flow with sufficient
slowness of its own accord, as it would have to pass from larger into
continually smaller vessels, being separated from the mass and fountain
head, and attaining from warmer into colder places. But
the valves are solely made and instituted lest the blood should pass from
the greater into the lesser veins, and either rupture them or cause them
to become varicose; lest, instead of advancing from the extreme to the
central parts of the body, the blood should rather proceed along the veins
from the centre to the extremities; but the delicate valves, while they
readily open in the right direction, entirely prevent all such contrary
motion, being so situated and arranged, that if anything escapes, or is
less perfectly obstructed by the cornua of the one above, the fluid
passing, as it were, by the chinks between the cornua, it is immediately
received on the convexity of the one beneath, which is placed transversely
with reference to the former, and so is effectually hindered from getting
any farther. And
this I have frequently experienced in my dissections of the veins: if I
attempted to pass a probe from the trunk of the veins into one of the
smaller branches, whatever care I took I found it impossible to introduce
it far any way, by reason of the valves; whilst, on the contrary, it was
most easy to push it along in the opposite direction, from without
inwards, or from the branches towards the trunks and roots. In many places
two valves are so placed and fitted, that when raised they come exactly
together in the middle of the vein, and are there united by the contact of
their margins; and so accurate is the adaptation, that neither by the eye
nor by any other means of examination, can the slightest chink along the
line of contact be perceived. But if the probe be now introduced from the
extreme towards the more central parts, the valves, like the floodgates of
a river, give way, and are most readily pushed aside. The effect of this
arrangement plainly is to prevent all motion of the blood from the heart
and vena cava, whether it be upwards towards the head, or downwards
towards the feet, or to either side towards the arms, not a drop can pass;
all motion of the blood, beginning in the larger and tending towards the
smaller veins, is opposed and resisted by them; whilst the motion that
proceeds from the lesser to end in the larger branches is favoured, or, at
all events, a free and open passage is left for it. But
that this truth may be made the more apparent, let an arm be tied up above
the elbow as if for phlebotomy (A, A, fig. 1). At intervals in the course
of the veins, especially in labouring people and those whose veins are
large, certain knots or elevations (B, C, D, E, F,) will be perceived, and
this not only at the places where a branch is received (E, F), but also
where none enters ( C, D): these knots or risings are all formed by
valves, which thus show themselves externally. And now if you press the
blood from the space above one of the valves, from H to O, (fig. 2,) and
keep the point of a finger upon the vein inferiorly, you will see no
influx of blood from above; the portion of the vein between the point of
the finger and the valve O will be obliterated; yet will the vessel
continue sufficiently distended above the valve (O, G). The blood being
thus pressed out, and the vein emptied, if you now apply a finger of the
other hand upon the distended part of the vein above the valve O, (fig.
3,) and press downwards, you will find that you cannot force the blood
through or beyond the valve; but the greater effort you use, you will only
see the portion of vein that is between the finger and the valve become
more distended, that portion of the vein which is below the valve
remaining all the while empty (H, O, fig. 3).
It
would therefore appear that the function of the valves in the veins is the
same as that of the three sigmoid valves which we find at the commencement
of the aorta and pulmonary artery, viz., to prevent all reflux of the
blood that is passing over them. Farther,
the arm being bound as before, and the veins looking full and distended,
if you press at one part in the course of a vein with the point of a
finger L, fig. 4), and then with another finger streak the blood upwards
beyond the next valve (N), you will perceive that this portion of the vein
continues empty (L N), and that the blood cannot retrograde, precisely as
we have already seen the case to be in fig. 2; but the finger first
applied (H, fig. 2, L, fig. 4), being removed, immediately the vein is
filled from below, and the arm becomes as it appears at D C, fig. l. That
the blood in the veins therefore proceeds from inferior or more remote to
superior parts, and towards the heart, moving in these vessels in this and
not in the contrary direction, appears most obviously. And although in
some places the valves, by not acting with such perfect accuracy, or where
there is but a single valve, do not seem totally to prevent the passage of
the blood from the centre, still the greater number of them plainly do so;
and then, where things appear contrived more negligently, this is
compensated either by the more frequent occurrence or more perfect action
of the succeeding valves, or in some other way: the veins, in short, as
they are the free and open conduits of the blood returning to the heart,
so are they effectually prevented from serving as its channels of
distribution from the heart. But
this other circumstance has to be noted: The arm being bound, and the
veins made turgid, and the valves prominent, as before, apply the thumb or
finger over a vein in the situation of one of the valves in such a way as
to compress it, and prevent any blood from passing upwards from the hand;
then, with a finger of the other hand, streak the blood in the vein
upwards till it has passed the next valve above (N, fig. 4,) the vessel
now remains empty; but the finger at L being removed for an instant, the
vein is immediately filled from below; apply the finger again, and having
in the same manner streaked the blood upwards, again remove the finger
below, and again the vessel becomes distended as before; and this repeat,
say a thousand times, in a short space of time. And now compute the
quantity of blood which you have thus pressed up beyond the valve, and
then multiplying the assumed quantity by one thousand, you will find that
so much blood has passed through a certain portion of the vessel; and I do
now believe that you will find yourself convinced of the circulation of
the blood, and of its rapid motion. But if in this experiment you say that
a violence is done to nature, I do not doubt but that, if you proceed in
the same way, only taking as great a length of vein as possible, and
merely remark with what rapidity the blood flows upwards, and fills the
vessel from below, you will come to the same conclusion. |
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