Clinical diagnosis : the bacteriological, chemical, and microscopical evidence of disease . Fig. 80.—Taenia saginata : Head ; Proglottis ; Egg. (Zeisss eye-piece II., objective IV.)From a preparation by Br. Cori. black-pigmented suckers, but is not provided with a rostellum, and iswithout a circle of hooklets. The segments increase in length moregradually than in Taenia solium, and are commonly pigmented. The uterus is very much branched, and the genital pore is situatedat the side of the proglottis. The eggs resemble those of Taenia solium,but are more oblong, and exhibit the primordial yolk


Clinical diagnosis : the bacteriological, chemical, and microscopical evidence of disease . Fig. 80.—Taenia saginata : Head ; Proglottis ; Egg. (Zeisss eye-piece II., objective IV.)From a preparation by Br. Cori. black-pigmented suckers, but is not provided with a rostellum, and iswithout a circle of hooklets. The segments increase in length moregradually than in Taenia solium, and are commonly pigmented. The uterus is very much branched, and the genital pore is situatedat the side of the proglottis. The eggs resemble those of Taenia solium,but are more oblong, and exhibit the primordial yolk membrane (fig. 80). 3. Taenia nana.—This parasite averages from to 10 mm. inlength, and its greatest breadth is about mm. It has a globular mm. in diameter, furnished with four circular suckers, and a mm. long, carrying twenty-two to thirty hooklets at its anteriorextremity, which is rounded off. The rostellum can be protruded toa considerable distance from the head or entirely withdraAvn Avithin the latter position it has the form of an hour-glas


Size: 1461px × 1710px
Photo credit: © The Reading Room / Alamy / Afripics
License: Licensed
Model Released: No

Keywords: ., boo, bookcentury1800, bookdecade1890, booksubjectclinicalmedicine