The medical examination for life insurance and its associated clinical methods : with chapters on the insurance of substandard lives and accident insurance . Fig. 81.—(After Jakob.)a. Calcium phosphate, b. Calcium sulphate. Abnormal infreshly passedurine. hot weather, when the high temperature prevents precipitationof the urates. Excessive acidity and concentration or a patho-logic excess may occur in certain conditions. Urine when passedshould never contain the crystals as a precipitate. The macroscopic deposit resembles Cayenne pepper. Themicroscopic appearance is best shown by the plate. (S


The medical examination for life insurance and its associated clinical methods : with chapters on the insurance of substandard lives and accident insurance . Fig. 81.—(After Jakob.)a. Calcium phosphate, b. Calcium sulphate. Abnormal infreshly passedurine. hot weather, when the high temperature prevents precipitationof the urates. Excessive acidity and concentration or a patho-logic excess may occur in certain conditions. Urine when passedshould never contain the crystals as a precipitate. The macroscopic deposit resembles Cayenne pepper. Themicroscopic appearance is best shown by the plate. (See Fig. 84.) Calcium Oxalate.—This rarely forms a visible sediment, andis abnormal if found in urine freshly passed. The crystals arecharacteristic and unmistakable (Fig. 85). I \ \Ml\ VI ION I I i RIN] IN 111 I [NS1 it \.


Size: 1583px × 1578px
Photo credit: © The Reading Room / Alamy / Afripics
License: Licensed
Model Released: No

Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1900, booksubjectdiagnosis, bookyear19