PROF. RICHARD EWALD of Strassburg, has just communicated a paper to the fifty-second volume of the Archiv. f. d. ges. Physiol., in which he confirms Prof. Haycraft's views concerning the structure of striped muscle. The latter observer has held for many years that muscle fibrils are varicose threads, and that the cross-striping is but an optical appearance due to this varicosity. The varicosity is often difficult to demonstrate in the ordinary way, and most histologists were not prepared to admit that the stripings are all and entirely due to it. Prof. Haycraft, however, recently brought forward to the Royal Society of London, and to the Berlin International Medical Congress, fresh and striking proof of the strength of his position, by demonstrating films of moist collodion, on which pieces of muscle had been pressed and then withdrawn. As a result of this pressure the collodion films were stamped as with a seal, and the impressions revealed in striking detail every stripe of the original fibre. Prof. Ewald confirms these experiments in the fullest manner, but suggests that the collodion impressions might be produced on the assumption that there are layers of hard and soft material alternating with each other in the course of the fibrils. In this case the hard material would press into the collodion and make a series of furrows, which would appear as a series of stripes when examined with the microscope. Prof. Haycraft had previously demonstrated the varicosity of the fibrils, seen by transmitted light, and had published photographs of his preparations, but Prof. Ewald was still sceptical upon this particular point, and sought to assure himself still more conclusively. With this end in view he examined muscle, which had been rendered quite opaque, by means of reflected light, for under these circumstances the influence of the internal structure would be entirely set on one side, and the surface of the fibrils would alone receive and reflect the illuminating rays. For purposes of illumination Prof. Ewald used the apparatus of W. and H. Seibert, of Wetzler, by means of which vertical rays can be projected upon an opaque object; and he rendered his preparations, both of fresh and of hardened muscle, quite opaque by a method of over-silvering. Under these conditions Prof. Ewald found that the cross-striping is most distinct, and he was able, with his admirable method of illumination, to examine the surface of a muscle just as one may observe the surface of the country at night by means of a search-light from an observatory. With the light perfectly vertical the tops of the ridges of the muscle are bright, and the valleys on either side in half-light. By shifting the light to one side or to another the slopes of the ridges can be thrown alternately into shadow or bright light. Prof. Ewald concludes by admitting that his experiments fully prove that the striping is due to the shape of the fibrils alone, and that the internal structure of the muscle plays no part in its production.
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