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The Collaborative International Dictionary
morbid anatomy

pathology \pa*thol"o*gy\ (-j[y^]), n.; pl. pathologies (-j[i^]z). [Gr. pa`qos a suffering, disease + -logy: cf. F. pathologie.]

  1. (Med.) The science which treats of diseases, their nature, causes, progress, symptoms, etc.

    Note: Pathology is general or special, according as it treats of disease or morbid processes in general, or of particular diseases; it is also subdivided into internal and external, or medical and surgical pathology. Its departments are nosology, [ae]tiology, morbid anatomy, symptomatology, and therapeutics, which treat respectively of the classification, causation, organic changes, symptoms, and cure of diseases.

  2. (Med.) The condition of an organ, tissue, or fluid produced by disease.

    Celluar pathology, a theory that gives prominence to the vital action of cells in the healthy and diseased function of the body.
    --Virchow.

Usage examples of "morbid anatomy".

There was Carl Rokitansky's A Manual of Pathological Anatomy, volumes I-IV (1849-54), George Viner Ellis's Illustrations of Dissections with life-size color plates (1867), and James Hope's Principles and Illustrations of Morbid Anatomy, with its Complete Series of Coloured Lithographic Drawings (1834).