Renal diseases : a clinical guide to their diagnosis and treatment . Torulae cerevisiae. in the urine when the quantity may be toominute for the chemical agency to determineits presence. The sporules of the peniciliumglauoum, arising in albuminous urine, are veryeasily distinguished from those of the torulaecerevisiae. Dr. HassaUs paper is illustratedwith drawings tracing these growths from the 296 THE URINE. Sporules. sporule stage to that of the filament and thallus,and ultimately to that of complete distinction between the sporules of albu-minous urine and those of saccha
Renal diseases : a clinical guide to their diagnosis and treatment . Torulae cerevisiae. in the urine when the quantity may be toominute for the chemical agency to determineits presence. The sporules of the peniciliumglauoum, arising in albuminous urine, are veryeasily distinguished from those of the torulaecerevisiae. Dr. HassaUs paper is illustratedwith drawings tracing these growths from the 296 THE URINE. Sporules. sporule stage to that of the filament and thallus,and ultimately to that of complete distinction between the sporules of albu-minous urine and those of saccharine urineare of importance to the student. They mayboth occur in the same urine, however. The Fig. 21. Penicilium glaueum. sporules of penicilium glaueum are small,minute, ovoid spores, which soon elongate, andgrow by lengthening in the long diameter, andpresenting, slowly, appearances similar to astring of sausages. The sporule of the sugarfungus is much larger, spheroidal, has a doublewall, and the contents of the cell are granularand nuclear; growth also takes place by elon-gation, but the filamentous stage is more dis-tinctly bead-like than that of the student should develop these sporules inurine and study the forms for himself. Ova.—Eeference has already been made tothe endemic hsematuria of certain countries—the Cape of Good Hope, Egypt, &c. THE URINE 297 ORGANICFORMS. Ova. Echino-cocci. From the careful observations of Dr. JohnHarley we are in possession of facts connectedwith the development of the ova of the hasma-toid worm—the Bilharzia hasmatobia. In apaper published in the 47th volume of the Medico-Chir. Transactions, the ova of thisentozoon are fi
Size: 1581px × 1581px
Photo credit: © The Reading Room / Alamy / Afripics
License: Licensed
Model Released: No
Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade1870, booksubjectkidneys, bookyear1870