The Microscope, and Its Application to Clinical Medicine

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Highley, 1854 - Всего страниц: 303

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APPARATUS NECESSARY FOR MICROSCOPICAL RESEARCHCEMENTS Apparatus PAGE 43 Spirit Lamp
42
Small Retort Stand
43
Small Water Bath
44
Plate Glass Slides
45
Scissors
46
Knives Scalpels
47
Gold Size
48
Solution of Shelllac
49
Canada Balsam
50
Gum
51
CHAPTER V
53
Method of cutting circular pieces of thin Glass
54
On fixing Cells to the Glass Slides
55
Cells for Preserving Preparations Thin Glass Cells
57
Cells made of Brunswick Black
58
Cells composed of very thin Glass
59
New method of making thin Glass Cells
60
Examination of Transparent Objects
72
CHAPTER VII
80
Of the Preservation of Objects in Aqueous Fluids
81
Solution of Naphtha and Creosote
87
Method of removing Air Bubbles
93
Corks for Injectingpipes
99
Colouring Matters used for Injections
101
Of Injections
109
Injecting Cans
116
Examination of the Kidney
124
Basement Membrane and Epithelium
125
Matrix
126
Microscopical Examination of the Kidney in Disease
127
Liver
128
Examination of Organs in the Lower Animals 148 Advantages derived from an Examination of the Organs of the Lower Animals
129
Kidney of Horse and other Animals
131
CHAPTER X
132
Examination of the Spinal Chord
133
Examination of Nerves
134
Examination of Vessels
135
Capillary Vessels of the Kidney
136
Minute Arteries of the Brain
137
Atheromatous and Bony Deposits in Arteries
138
Sarcolemma
139
Preparation of Muscular Fibre for Microscopical Ex amination
140
Examination of Nonstriated Muscular Fibre
142
Examination of the Muscular Structure of the Heart
143
Examination of the Lung in a Morbid State
144
Glandular Structures 168 Examination of the Thymus and Thyroid
145
Examination of Lymphatic Glands
146
Scaly Epithelium
147
Glandular or Spheroidal Epithelium
148
Examination of SkinCuticle
149
Pigment Cells
150
Method of making a vertical section of Skin
151
Mucous and Serous Membranes Adipose TissueThe Eye
153
Villi Muscular fibres
154
Ulcers of the Intestines
155
Serous and Synovial Membranes
156
Adipose Tissue
157
Examination of the Crystalline Lens
158
CHAPTER XI
160
Achorion Schonleinii
173
Apthæ Muguet
174
Sarcina Ventriculi
175
Other forms of Algæ
177
CHAPTER XII
178
Cutting thin Sections with the Saw
179
Polishing Thin Sections of hard Tissues
180
Examination of Bone
181
Mounting specimens of Bone
182
Examination of Nails
183
Examination of Hair
184
Examination of Osseous Tumors
185
CHAPTER XIII
186
Pipettes
187
Conical Glasses
188
Funnels filtering
189
Examination of Deposits from Fluids
190
CHAPTER XIV
199
Spermatozoa
205
Casts of medium diameter abcut the 1700th of an inch
206
Casts of considerable diameter about the 1500th of an inch or more
207
Casts of small diameter about the 11000th of an inch
208
Conditions in which fatty matter may be met with in Urine
209
In a molecular state
210
Second Class of Urinary Deposits 245 Pus
211
Lithates
212
Extraneous matters
213
Third Class of Urinary Deposits 249 Uric or Lithic Acid
214
Oxalate of Lime
216
Dumbbell crystals
217
Triple Phosphate
219
Carbonate of Lime
220
Spherical Cells containing Nuclei and Granular Matter
221
Small organic globules
222
On the Preservation of Urinary Deposits 259 Preservation of Urinary Deposits in the Dry way
223
Preservation of Urinary Deposits in Canada Balsam
224
Preservation of Urinary Deposits in Aqueous Fluids
225
Of separating the Deposit from the Urine and placing it in the Preservative Fluid
226
BLOODMILKSEROUS FLUIDSSPUTUMVOMITSUBSTANCES PASSED
228
Discharges from Uterus and VaginaPus
237
Preliminary Operations
243
Method of applying Tests to Substances intended for Microscopical Exami
251
Crystalline Substances from the Body
259
Urea Nitrate of Urea Oxalate of Urea
263
Creatine Creatinine
265
Uric or Lithic Acid
266
Hippuric Acid
268
Lactic Acid Lactates
269
Fatty MattersMargarineStearineCholesterineSerolin
270
Crystallizable Substance from the Blood
273
Crystallization of Bile
275
White Light for the Illumination of Objects
276
Gilletts Condenser
277
Binocular Microscope
278
Microscope for Chemical Observations
279
Manufacture of large Crystals of IodoQuinine
280
Corpora Amylacea
281
Removal of Stains from the Hands
282

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Стр. 176 - ... BROKEN LEG. — On the road, or on the street, a horse sometimes falls, makes several violent efforts to rise, and then lies still. Upon examination a fracture is found in one of his legs, generally a fore leg. There is something about this accident which I do not understand. It is far from being rare. In all the cases which have come under my own observation, the rider or driver could only tell that the horse fell, and could not rise, or that he made several efforts to keep his feet before he...
Стр. 48 - Gold size adapted for microscopical purposes may be also prepared as follows :— 25 parts of linseed oil are to be boiled with one part of red lead, and a third part as much umber, for three hours. The clear fluid is to be poured off and mixed with equal parts of white lead and yellow ochre, which have been previously well pounded. This is to be added in small successive portions, and well mixed ; the whole is then again to be well boiled, and the clear fluid poured ofl
Стр. 49 - It is prepared by dissolving, separately, equal parts of shell-lac and India-rubber, in coal or mineral naphtha, and afterwards mixing the solutions thoroughly with the application of heat. It may be rendered thinner by the addition of more naphtha. Marine glue is readily dissolved by naphtha, ether, or solution of potash. It is preserved well in a tin box.
Стр. 49 - Common Brunswick black is made by melting one pound of asphaltum, and then adding half a pound of linseed oil, and a quart of oil of turpentine. The best Brunswick black is prepared by boiling together a quarter of a pound of foreign asphaltum, and four and a quarter ounces of linseed oil, which has been previously boiled with half an ounce of litharge until quite stringy ; the mass is then mixed with half a pint of oil of turpentine, or as much as may be required to make it of a proper consistence....
Стр. 150 - ... by numerous stout fibrous bands, the space between being filled with a firm padding of fat. In some regions of the body the...
Стр. 163 - ... a tumour, arises principally from the fact, that no single element of which the structure is composed, can be looked upon as characteristic of the cancerous form of growth only. Neither the character of the cells, nor the structure of the matrix, nor the arrangement of the elementary constituents can separately determine the point, and it is only by carefully noting the collective appearances observed upon microscopical examination, that we can decide. In the great majority of cases, however,...
Стр. 149 - In the human subject, ciliated epithelium is found in the following situations : — on the surface of the ventricles of the brain and on the choroid plexuses ; on the mucous membrane of the nose and its sinuses ; on the upper and posterior part of the soft palate, and in the Eustachian tube ; in the cavity of the tympanum...
Стр. 232 - Small, delicate, transparent, and faintly granular bioplasts, without the slightest appearance of a nucleus, some being somewhat larger, and others smaller, than a pus corpuscle. 2. Large bodies, often as much as the thousandth of an inch in diameter, but varying in size, of a dark colour by transmitted, and white by reflected light. These, which have been termed

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