The science and art of surgery : being a treatise on surgical injuries, diseases, and operations . ^ be passed under it; and the heemor-. Fig. 585.—Excision of Upper Jaw by Listens Method. rhage from the incisions into the soft parts thus materiall3 parts to be removed should be then fairly exposed by raising a flapfrom the cheek. This may be fashioned in various ways (see Figs. 584,585, and 586). The following, which is the method adopted by Liston, 470 DISEASES OF THE JAWS AND THEIR APPENDAGES, will be found to be the most convenient where the tumor is very laro-e(Fig. 584). ^


The science and art of surgery : being a treatise on surgical injuries, diseases, and operations . ^ be passed under it; and the heemor-. Fig. 585.—Excision of Upper Jaw by Listens Method. rhage from the incisions into the soft parts thus materiall3 parts to be removed should be then fairly exposed by raising a flapfrom the cheek. This may be fashioned in various ways (see Figs. 584,585, and 586). The following, which is the method adopted by Liston, 470 DISEASES OF THE JAWS AND THEIR APPENDAGES, will be found to be the most convenient where the tumor is very laro-e(Fig. 584). ^ In the first stage, the central incisor tooth on the diseased side havingbeen extracted, the point of a bistoury is entered opposite the externalangular process of the frontal bone, and carried with a semicircularsweep into the angle of the mouth. From the upper end of this incision,a cut about one inch in length may be carried along the zygoma. An-other incision is made from the nasal process of the superior maxillarybone, down to the side of the nose, round the ala, which it detaches,and through the centre of the upper lip int


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