. A practical treatise on medical diagnosis for students and physicians . Lymphatie Leukaemia. Large Mono-nuclear Lymphocyte. 2. Polymorphonuclear Leucocyte or Small Lymphocyte, dividing Spleno-Myelogenous Leukaemia. Myelocyte. 2. Eosinophile Myelocyte. 3. Normoblastic Red Corpuscles: dividing or fragmenting n 4. Eosinophile Leucocyte. 5. Large Mono-nuclear Lymphocyte. 6. Small Lymphocyte. 7. Polymorphonuclear Leucocyte or Neutrophile. 8. Megaloblast. SYMPTOMS OF LEUCOCYTILEMIA. <S41 nose, gums, bowels, stomach, lungs, or uterus further exhaust the patient;digestion i


. A practical treatise on medical diagnosis for students and physicians . Lymphatie Leukaemia. Large Mono-nuclear Lymphocyte. 2. Polymorphonuclear Leucocyte or Small Lymphocyte, dividing Spleno-Myelogenous Leukaemia. Myelocyte. 2. Eosinophile Myelocyte. 3. Normoblastic Red Corpuscles: dividing or fragmenting n 4. Eosinophile Leucocyte. 5. Large Mono-nuclear Lymphocyte. 6. Small Lymphocyte. 7. Polymorphonuclear Leucocyte or Neutrophile. 8. Megaloblast. SYMPTOMS OF LEUCOCYTILEMIA. <S41 nose, gums, bowels, stomach, lungs, or uterus further exhaust the patient;digestion is poor and diarrhoea is common. Headache and tinnitus arefrequent symptoms, occasionally delirium and coma may occur, and deaf-ness is not uncommon toward the close of the disease. The eyes maybe the seat of leuksemic retinitis. The liver is enlarged, often to a considerable degree, but without specialsymptoms. The same is true of the lymphatic glands and other adenoidtissue. (See Plate , Fig. 1.) The marrow of the bonesbecomes the seat of disease in some cases, but it does not usually giverise to symptoms during life; certain bones, however, may be Fig. 333. DATE 6 y <; 6 _ 6/ r, ;


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