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Excerpt from The London Medical and Physical Journal, 1828, Vol. 59
If the senses are to be trusted, arteries do dilate in the usual state of the body, when not exposed it is apparent in the pulse Of superficial arteries it is sensible in a finger sura rounded y a ring. I have Observed it as most evidently proved by the alternate rise and fall Of matter collected in a deep ulcer in the groin, over the femoral artery. It is evident in the jet from a divided artery, and in the pulsation Of one that is tied.
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