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Blood, a Study in General Physiology.

JAMA. 1929;92(5):415-416. doi:10.1001/jama.1929.02700310061038.
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ABSTRACT

This gives clinical and physiologic investigators the information needed to proceed intelligently with work on the respiratory and metabolic functions of the organism from a physicochemical point of view. To one reading Henderson's original paper on the regulation of neutrality in the organism just twenty years ago, the present volume could hardly have been foreseen; yet it is the logical outgrowth of this pioneer work. Step by step in the laboratories of this country and abroad, data have been supplied which he has synthesized into a complete and rational picture of the blood as a physicochemical system and what this system means for the physiologic processes of the organism as a whole. It is an excellent example of the harmonious welding of concrete details and abstract thought. The opening chapter is concerned with an exposition of the definition of general physiology and the relations between the subject matter of the

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