Diagnostic methods, chemical, bacteriological and microscopical : a text-book for students and practitioners . 2832 29. The Leucocytes.(i-i6, T) iacid Siaitt ; 17-36, Eosin and Melhyle7ie-blue.) (E. F. Faber,/£c.) (From Di7 Coslas Clinical Hematology.) THE BLOOD. 475 pathological disease conditions. It is true that in some cases we do have directdisease of the blood-forming organs and, in consequence, variations in the cellu-lar structures are of diagnostic importance, yet in the large majority of cases thepreliminary changes must be resident in the plasma, those in the cellular structurebeing


Diagnostic methods, chemical, bacteriological and microscopical : a text-book for students and practitioners . 2832 29. The Leucocytes.(i-i6, T) iacid Siaitt ; 17-36, Eosin and Melhyle7ie-blue.) (E. F. Faber,/£c.) (From Di7 Coslas Clinical Hematology.) THE BLOOD. 475 pathological disease conditions. It is true that in some cases we do have directdisease of the blood-forming organs and, in consequence, variations in the cellu-lar structures are of diagnostic importance, yet in the large majority of cases thepreliminary changes must be resident in the plasma, those in the cellular structurebeing simply incidental. It may be, therefore, necessary to assume a functionalactivity on the part of the red cells to overcome biologic changes in the plasmaand if so we must attempt to discover just what plasma changes we are toregard as significant of the various conditions shown by the red cells in eachtrue blood disease. (6). Leucocytes.(A). the fresh specimen the leucocytes appear as colorless, highly refractivebodies, somewhat larger than the red cells, and showing a definite white


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1900, booksubjectdiagnosis, bookyear19