. A manual of clinical diagnosis by means of microscopical and chemical methods, for students, hospital physicians, and practitioners . ICAL EXAMINATION OF THE URINE. 505 a> to the amount actually eliminated can be drawn from a micro-scopical examination, and the diagnosis phosphaturia should bebased only upon the results of a quantitative analysis. The continued elimination of a turbid urine, the turbidity of whichis referable to phosphates, is notably observed in neurasthenic indi-viduals with a predominance of cerebral symptoms. Very curiously,the phosphaturia is not influenced by diet.


. A manual of clinical diagnosis by means of microscopical and chemical methods, for students, hospital physicians, and practitioners . ICAL EXAMINATION OF THE URINE. 505 a> to the amount actually eliminated can be drawn from a micro-scopical examination, and the diagnosis phosphaturia should bebased only upon the results of a quantitative analysis. The continued elimination of a turbid urine, the turbidity of whichis referable to phosphates, is notably observed in neurasthenic indi-viduals with a predominance of cerebral symptoms. Very curiously,the phosphaturia is not influenced by diet. Monocalcium phosphate crystals are rarely seen, and only in speci-mens presenting a highly acid reaction, when uric acid crystals arealso frequently observed in large numbers. I have seen only a fewcases of this kind, occurring in patients the subjects of functionalalbuminuria. The urine was highly acid, in one case of a specificgravity of , and on standing deposited a sediment which con-sisted largely of monocalcium phosphate crystals (Fig. 108), with aconsiderable number of uric acid crystals, from which they are Fig.


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1900, booksubjectdiagnos, bookyear1902