. The practice of medicine; a text-book for practitioners and students, with special reference to diagnosis and treatment . Fig. 126.—a. a. Dark Granular b. Casts Partially Hyaline, ContainingOil-Drops and Granular Matter. X225. Fig. 127.— Casts. Xiso. pale granular (Fig. 125, c), slightly or delicately granular (Fig. 126, /), ac-cording to the amoimt of grantilar matter present. When the materialof grantilar casts is derived from broken-down blood-corpuscles, the castsappear yellow or yellowish-red. Finally, if a cast is loaded with oil drops,either free or contained in epitheli


. The practice of medicine; a text-book for practitioners and students, with special reference to diagnosis and treatment . Fig. 126.—a. a. Dark Granular b. Casts Partially Hyaline, ContainingOil-Drops and Granular Matter. X225. Fig. 127.— Casts. Xiso. pale granular (Fig. 125, c), slightly or delicately granular (Fig. 126, /), ac-cording to the amoimt of grantilar matter present. When the materialof grantilar casts is derived from broken-down blood-corpuscles, the castsappear yellow or yellowish-red. Finally, if a cast is loaded with oil drops,either free or contained in epithelial cells, it is called an oil cast or fattycast (Fig. 128). Casts of smaller diameter are sometimes found within those of larger,the material of the latter having been poured out around that of theformer after it has undergone some contraction. This occurs usually withwaxy or hyaline casts. In consequence of the mode of formation previouslyreferred to, hyaline and waxy casts vary considerably in diameter, somebeing as narrow as i/iooo inch ( mm.) and even narrower, whileothers are as much as 1/500 inch (


Size: 1541px × 1621px
Photo credit: © Reading Room 2020 / Alamy / Afripics
License: Licensed
Model Released: No

Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1910, bookidpracticeofme, bookyear1913