Clinical diagnosis : the bacteriological, chemical, and microscopical evidence of disease . be known from that of ascites, and ex-ceptionally, it has a sp. gr. even lower than that of a transudation Fig. 151.—Contents of an Ovarian Cyst (eye-piece III., objective 8A, Reichert).a. Squamous epithelium cells; 6. Ciliated epithelium cells; c. Columnar epithelium cells;d. Various forms of epithelial cells ; e. Fatty squamous epithelium cells ; /. Colloidbodies ; g. Cholesterin crystals. According to Scliatz, Gusserow, and Westphalen,os a low sp. gr. withlittle albumin points to a cyst of th


Clinical diagnosis : the bacteriological, chemical, and microscopical evidence of disease . be known from that of ascites, and ex-ceptionally, it has a sp. gr. even lower than that of a transudation Fig. 151.—Contents of an Ovarian Cyst (eye-piece III., objective 8A, Reichert).a. Squamous epithelium cells; 6. Ciliated epithelium cells; c. Columnar epithelium cells;d. Various forms of epithelial cells ; e. Fatty squamous epithelium cells ; /. Colloidbodies ; g. Cholesterin crystals. According to Scliatz, Gusserow, and Westphalen,os a low sp. gr. withlittle albumin points to a cyst of the broad ligament. When haemorrhage has taken place into the cyst, its contents mayvary in colour from red to a chocolate-brown, and be very turbid. Themicroscopical examination of ovarian fluid shows a very variable quantityof red and white blood-corpuscles, and many forms of epithelium, squam-ous, columnar, and ciliated (fig. 151, a, b, c). These cells, however,are rarely well preserved, but are for the most part far advanced infatty degeneration, and often with difficulty recognisable. Colloid con-cretions (fig. 151, /), in all probability derived from epithelium, areinvariably found in the so-c


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Keywords: ., boo, bookcentury1800, bookdecade1890, booksubjectclinicalmedicine