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The Sedimentation Test and Icterus Index: A Few Observations on Their Uses in a Mental Hospital

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  19 February 2018

Helen S. E. Murray*
Affiliation:
County Mental Hospital, Whittingham

Extract

By the erythrocyte sedimentation phenomenon is meant the rate at which the red blood-corpuscles settle in an anti-coagulative column of blood. Numerous modifications of the method are in use, differing only in the way results are recorded and in minor details of technique.

Type
Part I.—Original Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Royal College of Psychiatrists, 1930 

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References

1 Fahraeus, R., Acta Med. Scand., 1921, lv, p. 1.Google Scholar
2 Balachowsky, S., Ann. de Méd., September, 1925, xviii, p. 210.Google Scholar
3 Hunt, H. F., “Studies of Sedimentation of Erythrocytes,” Journ. Lab. and Clin. Med., August, 1929.Google Scholar
4 Westergren, , Ada Med. Scand., 1921, liv, p. 247; Brit. Journ. of Tuberc., 1921, xv, p. 72.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
5 Linzenmeier, G., “Sedimentation Rate of the Red Blood-cells,” Zentralbl. f. Gynäk., April, 1922, xlvii, No. 14, p. 535; Pflüger's Arch. f. d. ges. Physiol., clxxxi, p. 169.Google Scholar
6 Gram, H. C., “On the Causes of the Variations in the Sedimentation of the Corpuscles and the Formation of the Crusta phlogistica,” Arch. Int. Med., 1921, xxviii, pp. 312330.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
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