. Dental materia medica and therapeutics; with special reference to the rational application of remedial measures to dental diseases ... A Hypodermic Syringe Prepared for Bone Plombe. A flexible cannula is attached to thehypodermic syringe for the purpose of conveying the bone plombe to a root canal of a tooth. the liquid in a water bath, and then pouring 60 grams of thehot mixture into a farge dry bottle containing 40 grams of finelypulverized iodoform, and shaking constantly until the mass 440 PHYSICAL THERAPEUTICS. hardens. For dental purposes, Mayrhofer advises the follow-ing modified form


. Dental materia medica and therapeutics; with special reference to the rational application of remedial measures to dental diseases ... A Hypodermic Syringe Prepared for Bone Plombe. A flexible cannula is attached to thehypodermic syringe for the purpose of conveying the bone plombe to a root canal of a tooth. the liquid in a water bath, and then pouring 60 grams of thehot mixture into a farge dry bottle containing 40 grams of finelypulverized iodoform, and shaking constantly until the mass 440 PHYSICAL THERAPEUTICS. hardens. For dental purposes, Mayrhofer advises the follow-ing modified formula: Spermaceti 30 parts. Oil of sesame 15 parts. Iodoform 10 parts. This combination produces a more durable filling, as it is of aharder consistency than the original formula. The iodoform odoris extremely disagreeable, and even nauseating, to some substituting an odorless iodin compound—as europhen, vio-. FlGURE 67. Bone Plombe in Position. An x-ray picture of a fistula filled with bone plombe leading froma lower incisor through the body of the mandible to the chin. form, aristol, etc.—this objection is readily overcome withoutmaterially lessening the antiseptic qualities of the filling. Theready-made filling is kept in small well-stoppered bottles, testtubes, or collapsible tubes. By placing the bottle or tube in acontainer filled with hot water, it is heated to the point of liquefac-tion, stirred, and is then ready for use. Recently Rudolph Beck1 has described a similar filling which 1 Rudolph Beck: Dental Review, 1909, No. 1. PLUGGING BONE CAVITIES. 441 was suggested to him by Emil and Joseph Beck. The latter em-ploy this paste in sinuses of joints and abscess cavities. TheBeck bone paste is composed as follows: Bismuth subnitrate 30 parts. White wax 5 parts. Paraffin 5 parts. Vaselin • 60 parts. The ingredients are mixed by boiling. The technique of applying the Beck paste is s


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1910, bookpublisherstlou, bookyear1913