260 



THE PROTEAL TREATMENT OF CANCER 



(the aberrant case being omitted); poly nuclear s, 65 per cent.; 

 large monocytes, 11.7 per cent; small lymphocytes, 22 per cent.; 

 eosinophiles, 1 per cent. 



These results may be compared with the table, herewith pre- 

 sented, of our own untreated cases. It will be seen that there is 

 close general agreement. I would call special attention to the 



TABLE II THE BLOOD COUNT IN CANCER 

 TWENTY-NINE CASES OF DR. PRICE JONES \t THE MIDDLESEX HOSPITAL, ENGLAND 



TABLE III TWENTY-TWO CASES OF CANCER WITH BONE METASTASES 

 REPORTED BY DIFFERENT PHYSICIANS 



column showing the percentages of large mononuclear leucocytes. 

 Recalling that in normal blood the large monocytes number only 

 2 or 3 per cent., as a rule, with perhaps 5 per cent, as maximum, 

 it will be noted that in Price Jones' series of cases these cells num- 

 ber 10.35 per cent, of all leucocytes ; in 22 cases of bone metasta- 



