268 



THE PROTEAL TREATMENT OF CANCER 



ary, 1916, after about six months' treatment, showed 100 per cent, 

 haemoglobin, 5,096,000 red blood corpuscles, and 8,000 leucocytes 

 with 60 per cent, polys., 23.5 large monocytes; 13 per cent, small 

 lymphocytes; 2.5 eosinophiles, and 1 per cent, basophiles. 



At the time when this count was made, the patient was steadily 

 progressing, and she went ahead to seemingly complete clinical 

 recovery. 



TABLE VII ORIGINAL CASES 



THIRTY-ONE UNSELECTED CASES OF INOPERABLE CANCER AT EARLIER AND LATER STAGES 



OF PROTEIN TREATMENT 

 FIRST COUNT AFTER AN AVERAGE PERIOD OF NINETY DAYS OF TREATMENT 



This table may advantageously be compared with earlier tables showing blood condition 

 in untreated cancer cases, and with the table on the opposite page, showing later history of 

 the same cases. 



It will be of interest to contrast this blood count with another, 

 No. 399, which chanced to be made on the same day, in which 

 the haemoglobin test was also 100 per cent, and in which the red 

 blood count was 4,896,000, but in which the leucocyte count was 

 9,500 (more than could be desired), polymorphs representing 69.5 

 per cent., and large monocytes, only 14.5 per cent., as against 14.5 

 per cent, small lymphocytes, together with 1.5 per cent, eosino- 

 philes and 1 per cent, basophiles. 



