. A practical treatise on medical diagnosis for students and physicians . ity. While more frequent in the lower animals, it hasoften been encountered in man. Its most frequent habitat is in the duo-denum and jejunum, but occurs also in the large intestine. In the stoolsit is often in the encysted stage, but may be encountered in an activestate. It commonly occurs in the stools of chronic diarrhoea, but is ofuncertain pathogenic importance. b. Trichomonas intestinalis (vel Tr. hominis, Cercomonas intestinalis,C. hominis, etc.) is somewhat smaller than the preceding, being about10 or 12 p. in le


. A practical treatise on medical diagnosis for students and physicians . ity. While more frequent in the lower animals, it hasoften been encountered in man. Its most frequent habitat is in the duo-denum and jejunum, but occurs also in the large intestine. In the stoolsit is often in the encysted stage, but may be encountered in an activestate. It commonly occurs in the stools of chronic diarrhoea, but is ofuncertain pathogenic importance. b. Trichomonas intestinalis (vel Tr. hominis, Cercomonas intestinalis,C. hominis, etc.) is somewhat smaller than the preceding, being about10 or 12 p. in length, of a pyriform or subovoid shape, tapering at eachextremity, and provided with five flagella (four attached to the anteriorextremity and the fifth passing from the anterior part backward as theborder of an undulating membrane and extending some distance beyondthe posterior extremity of the cell). The appearance of cilia is givenalong the side by the undulating membrane. Close to the base of theflagella is a mouth-like depression. Within the cell a definite nucleus.


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