. A Reference handbook of the medical sciences : embracing the entire range of scientific and practical medicine and allied science. ine and more commonly in warmweather. The allied yeast fungus (S. cerevisiae) is veryabundant in diabetic urine. Besides these forms there are many others which, like 440 REFERENCE HANDBOOK OF THE MEDICAL SCIENCES. thepcnicilium glaucum and the oidum lactis, are to be re-garded as accidental growths. A rare fungus, the sarcinaurines, allied to the sarcina ventriculi, but smaller, isoccasionally developed in the bladder and found in is co


. A Reference handbook of the medical sciences : embracing the entire range of scientific and practical medicine and allied science. ine and more commonly in warmweather. The allied yeast fungus (S. cerevisiae) is veryabundant in diabetic urine. Besides these forms there are many others which, like 440 REFERENCE HANDBOOK OF THE MEDICAL SCIENCES. thepcnicilium glaucum and the oidum lactis, are to be re-garded as accidental growths. A rare fungus, the sarcinaurines, allied to the sarcina ventriculi, but smaller, isoccasionally developed in the bladder and found in is composed of cubes arranged in one plane, lookinglike minute corded bales of goods under the are but rarely found in urine. Echinococcushooks and cysts have been found. The eggs and larvaeof the distoma hceinalobium are sometimes present in theurine of persons suffering from hematuria in tropicalcountries. Associated with chyluria are often seen thelarval forms of the filaria sanguinis hominis. Isolated cancer-cells and pieces of cancerous tissue are oc-casionally seen in urine. The cells (Fig. 4288) are large,. Fig. 4288.—Cancer Tissue and Cells. (Ultzmann.) often caudate, with large nucleus containing nucleoli(Fig. 4288, B), and sometimes with vacuoles (Be). Thesegenerally come from villous cancer of the bladder, frag-ments and cells of which are seen in the tissue is rarely well enough preserved for identi-fication. Various forms are seen ; a well-preserved pieceof tissue will often show the characteristic dendriticformation of the villous growth, as seen in Fig. 4289, A ;B, represents a portion of this growth more highly mag-nified, and D, the epithelial cells from the same. Frag-ments like those illustrated from villous tumors of the


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade1880, booksubjectmedicine, bookyear188