Atlas of urinary sediments : with special reference to their clinical significance / by Hermann Rieder ; translated by Frederick Craven Moore ; edited and annotated by A. Sheridan Delépine.
- Hermann Rieder
- Date:
- 1899
Licence: Public Domain Mark
Credit: Atlas of urinary sediments : with special reference to their clinical significance / by Hermann Rieder ; translated by Frederick Craven Moore ; edited and annotated by A. Sheridan Delépine. Source: Wellcome Collection.
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![Fig. 1 Fig. 2. Fig. 3. Fig. 4. Fig. 5. Fig. 6. NEEDLES OF URIC ACID. Irregularly scattered and arranged in tufts; also numerous granules of AMORPHOUS URATES. [Needles presenting appearances identical to those represented in this drawing have been found, by the editor, to give the micro-chemical reactions of urate of lime.] From a tophus. AMORPHOUS URATE GRANULES of pale yellowish colour, aggre¬ gated in small groups. [Compare with Fig. 6, Plate V.] ACID AMMONIUM URATE. Small spheroids and dumb-bells. ACID AMMONIUM URATE. Double spheroids, the so-called dumb¬ bells. From alkaline urine. ACID AMMONIUM URATE. Acicular and [imperfect] prismatic crystals arranged in the form of irregular dumb-bells and bundles. [Compare with Fig. 3, and with Plate VI., Fig 1.] ACID AMMONIUM URATE. Showing rhizome forms, also some RED BLOOD-CORPUSCLES and a crystal of CALCIUM OXALATE. [Acid urate of sodium may also assume this form.] From acid urine.](https://iiif.wellcomecollection.org/image/b29309116_0038.jp2/full/800%2C/0/default.jpg)


