Surgery; its theory and practice . Urates. (Bryants Surger>.) Uric acid crystals. (Bryants Surgery.) of the presence of uric acid, as well as of the urates, are : tissue waste, as in fevers; 2. Over-indulgence in animal Fig. 324. Fig. Crystals of oxalate of lime. (Bryants Surgery.) Phosphate of lime. (Br>ants Surgery.) food; 3. Dyspepsia ; 4. Congestion of the kidney ; 5. Gout; and6. Deficient action of the skin. 676 DISEASES OF REGIONS. 3. The oxalate of lime is a crystalline deposit and assumes twoforms, the octahedral and the dumb-bell crystals (Fig. 324). Onholding the


Surgery; its theory and practice . Urates. (Bryants Surger>.) Uric acid crystals. (Bryants Surgery.) of the presence of uric acid, as well as of the urates, are : tissue waste, as in fevers; 2. Over-indulgence in animal Fig. 324. Fig. Crystals of oxalate of lime. (Bryants Surgery.) Phosphate of lime. (Br>ants Surgery.) food; 3. Dyspepsia ; 4. Congestion of the kidney ; 5. Gout; and6. Deficient action of the skin. 676 DISEASES OF REGIONS. 3. The oxalate of lime is a crystalline deposit and assumes twoforms, the octahedral and the dumb-bell crystals (Fig. 324). Onholding the urine up to the light the crystals as minute shiningparticles are seen in it. The causes are : i. Nervous exhaustionfrom overwork or sexual excesses. 2. Dyspepsia induced by sac-charine food, excess of alcohol, or vegetable diet. 4. Phosphatic deposits occur in three forms, {a) phosphate oflime, {b) phosphate of ammonia and magnesia, or triple phos-phates, {c) the two former mixed, or the fusible phosphates, i^d)Phosphate of lime forms a white cloud or amorphous deposit of palegranules or spheroids, two of which adhering form the so-calledfalse dumb-bell; or a crystalline deposit of six-sided prisms col-lected into sheaths or bundles (Fig. 325


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade1890, booksubjectsurgery, bookyear1896