The practice of obstetrics, designed for the use of students and practitioners of medicine . Fig. 688.—At the Pelvic Inlet. ^J^^^^if qr~. Fig. 689.—At the Pelvic Inlet. Here the sagittal suture approaches thesymphysis, with the resulting presentationof the posterior parietal bone or ear. In-complete flexion with the sinciput lowerthan the occiput will often be present. Thecondition usually occurs in markedly flat-tened pelves, the latter obstruction result-ing in a lateral flexion of the fetal body andhead, the reverse of the Naegele rarely does Litzmanns obliquity oc-cur in nor


The practice of obstetrics, designed for the use of students and practitioners of medicine . Fig. 688.—At the Pelvic Inlet. ^J^^^^if qr~. Fig. 689.—At the Pelvic Inlet. Here the sagittal suture approaches thesymphysis, with the resulting presentationof the posterior parietal bone or ear. In-complete flexion with the sinciput lowerthan the occiput will often be present. Thecondition usually occurs in markedly flat-tened pelves, the latter obstruction result-ing in a lateral flexion of the fetal body andhead, the reverse of the Naegele rarely does Litzmanns obliquity oc-cur in normal pelves. The highest degreeof this, as of Naegeles obliquity, is the pre-sentation of an ear. The diagnosis maycause some uncertainty unless the wholehand is introduced into the vagina, whenthe conditions above described will bereadily recognized. The prognosis will usually depend on the amount and variety of the pelvic contraction; it is favor-able in the so-called spontaneous cases and in moderate degrees of is unfavorable in a moderate degree of general contraction should the browenter the pelvis. The treatme


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1910, booksubjectobstetrics, bookyear1