Surgical treatment; a practical treatise on the therapy of surgical diseases for the use of practitioners and students of surgery . be done at once without fear of placing strainon the sutures. It may be left in the duodenum several days if necessary. The technic for the application of purse-string sutures is given underIntestinal Sutures, page 626; and Vol. I, page 201. Pylorodiosis consists in enlarging the outlet of the stomach by malignant or cicatricial stricture this operation may give temporary some cases of spasm of the pylorus it is a useful procedure. Its fiel


Surgical treatment; a practical treatise on the therapy of surgical diseases for the use of practitioners and students of surgery . be done at once without fear of placing strainon the sutures. It may be left in the duodenum several days if necessary. The technic for the application of purse-string sutures is given underIntestinal Sutures, page 626; and Vol. I, page 201. Pylorodiosis consists in enlarging the outlet of the stomach by malignant or cicatricial stricture this operation may give temporary some cases of spasm of the pylorus it is a useful procedure. Its fieldof application is small, and it is by no means without danger. Rupture ofthe duodenum and fatal peritonitis have been attributed to the bleeding may take place from the mucous membrane. The operation oj Lor eta opens the stomach about 5 cm. (2 inches) from the VOL. 11—47 738 SCRGICAL TREATMENT pylorus by an incision midway between the two curvatures and parallelwith them. A bougie, finger or other dilating instrument is passed into theconstricted pylorus while the hand steadies the parts. The dilation is. Fig. 1405.—Pyloroplasty. First clamped for operation. Showing line of incision.


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1920, booksubjectsurgery, bookyear1920