. Modern surgery, general and operative. 1049.—IModified circular amputa-tion of the forearm (Bryant). Fig. 1050.—Disarticulation of the elbow-joint bythe oblique circular method (Kocher). lar flaps are made. The long flap is equal in width and length to one-half thecircumference of the hmb at the point where it is to be sawn. The short flap isequal in width to the long flap, but is only one-fourth its length. The twolongitudinal cuts are at first taken only through the skin, but the two transversecuts go at once to the bone. The flaps are dissected up from the interosseousmembrane and the bon


. Modern surgery, general and operative. 1049.—IModified circular amputa-tion of the forearm (Bryant). Fig. 1050.—Disarticulation of the elbow-joint bythe oblique circular method (Kocher). lar flaps are made. The long flap is equal in width and length to one-half thecircumference of the hmb at the point where it is to be sawn. The short flap isequal in width to the long flap, but is only one-fourth its length. The twolongitudinal cuts are at first taken only through the skin, but the two transversecuts go at once to the bone. The flaps are dissected up from the interosseousmembrane and the bone. In the middle or the upper third of a fleshy armtwo semilunar skin-flaps can be cut from without inward, and the muscles can becut by transfixion.


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1910, bookidmodernsurger, bookyear1919