Several crystals are found only rarely in the urine. Often these crystals are difficult to differentiate from some particular shapes of a "usual" crystals. Before considering the possibility of an exotic crystal, it is necessary to exhaust the possibilities of a rare shape of a usual one. Some rare crystals are found mainly in acidic specimens, while others are found in alkaline media. Again. this represents only a tendency.

 The cystine is seen as colorless         hexagonal plates. The solubility of the cystine is much larger in         alkaline urine, with the result that the former is rarely found         in alkaline urine. These colorless crystals can be difficult to         distinguish from the hexagonal plate form of uric acid crystals.         But, in this case, the examination of the crystals under         polarized light will probably show birefringent crystals with a         polarization color interference. 
Cystine crystals is a clinically significant finding. 
A confirmatory test is described 
elsewhere.
       Crystals of the amino acids leucine and tyrosine are very         rarely seen in a urinary sediment. These crystals can be observed         in some hereditary diseases like tyrosinosis and the "Maple         syrup disease", but these conditions are very rare. The         majority of cases where one finds these crystals are in patients         with a serious hepatic problem, often in a terminal stage. In         these cases, a concurrent presence of leucine and tyrosine is         observed.
           | Leucine  The leucine                 crystals are seen as yellow spheres with concentric and                 radial strias. These crystals can sometimes be mistaken                 with cells, the central part simulating a nucleus. Under                 polarized light, the former presents a maltese cross                 interference pattern. | 
           | Tyrosine Tyrosine                 crystallizes as brown neddles, isolated or forming a                 dense rosette. | 
       
 Bilirubine crystallizes         in the urine as fine needles that regroup in a clump or as red         brown spheres. The clinical meaning is the same as the bilirubin         detected with the dipstick.
       
 Cholesterol         crystallizes as thin rectangular plates with one of the corners         (sometimes two or more) having a square notch. These crystals are         very slightly birefringent. The cause of the presence of         crystallized cholesterol is obscure. These crystals are seen in         degenerative kidney diseases and are thought to have an identical         clinical meaning as oval fat bodies. The presence of these         crystals is normally accompanied by a heavy proteinuria. These         crystals are very rare.
       
 In a case of         intravascular hemolysis, a part of the free hemoglobin passes         through the glomerule. The former is then reabsorbed by the         tubular cells. The hemoglobin is then concentrated and         transformed slowly to a deep red brown pigmented granules, the         hemosiderin. These hemosiderin granules can be seen free, inside         tubular cells, and embedded in a cast. The free granules         agglomerate forming amorphous red brown deposit. A staining         procedure, based on the Roux reaction (Prussian blue), is         possible for the urinary sediment.
       
 The ammonium biurates, also called acid         ammonium urates, crystallize as a sphere with strias that reminds         a dried apple. Several crystals will show characteristic ox-horn         projections. The crystals are strongly birefringent. Ammonium         biurates are rarely seen in a fresh specimen. The former are         found in old specimens that turned alkaline.
       
 The calcium         phosphate crystals are also named di-calcium phosphate or         hydroxyl-apatite. Its mineral name is brushite. This substance         crystallizes as a long prism with one sharped end. These crystals         are slightly birefringent.
Calcium phosphate crystals are found with triple phosphates         and their clinical meaning is identical.
       
 The calcium carbonate         crystallizes as very small spheres. These spheres can be found         alone, in pair as dumbbell shape or in four units taking a cross         shape. These are strongly birefringent. Calcium carbonate         crystals are rare, probably because they are difficult to         distinguish from amorphous phosphates. Some authors report as         calcium carbonate what is recognized by others as amorphous         phosphates. The reason is that this crystal is found mixed with         amorphous phosphates thus forming a combined crystalluria of         homogeneous appearance. The clinical meaning of the calcium         carbonate is the same as amorphous phosphates.
       
 Calcium sulfate         crystallizes as thin plates with sharp ends. The plate can be         isolated or forming a rosette. These crystals are of little         clinical meaning.