Oral surgery; a text-book on general surgery and medicine as applied to dentistry . ratus,Method of Applying Bandage, and Result. line of one quart was injected into the median cephalic atthe elbow, and when the patient aroused hemorrhage hadceased. The only inconvenience resulting from the acci-dent has been occasional neuralgic pain, confined to themaxillary division of the fifth nerve. All appliances are made of metal to fit the roof of themouth and the teeth. Arms are soldered to the sides ofthe plate and project from the mouth through the plate is held firmly with a bandage pas


Oral surgery; a text-book on general surgery and medicine as applied to dentistry . ratus,Method of Applying Bandage, and Result. line of one quart was injected into the median cephalic atthe elbow, and when the patient aroused hemorrhage hadceased. The only inconvenience resulting from the acci-dent has been occasional neuralgic pain, confined to themaxillary division of the fifth nerve. All appliances are made of metal to fit the roof of themouth and the teeth. Arms are soldered to the sides ofthe plate and project from the mouth through the plate is held firmly with a bandage passing over thehead. (See figures 212, 213, 214.) FRACTURE OF THE MAXILLA 411 Maxillary Fracture From Extractions.—During extrac-tion of teeth it is quite common for small portions of boneto come away with a tooth, but for no ill results to be an-ticipated. If, however, any considerable portion of boneis attached to the tooth or detached from the process bythe tooth or forceps, careful examination of the partsshould be made by the operator, so as to guard against Fig. 214.—Fracture of Maxilla and Mandible. It is an occasional complication for the mandible to bebroken through and a more frequent occurrence for theouter or inner half of the process to be split away downto the apices of one or more teeth. In the maxilla, es-pecially in the intermaxillary process where the bone is notso stable, the entire process is occasionally torn away. Thisis more liable in mouths that have had suppurative condi-tions about the teeth, for in such cases ankylosis of thetooth to the bone usually follows if the pathological change 412 FRACTURE OF UPPER PART OF FACE has extended down in the socket for any distance. (Figure216.) A dentist recently came to the author and showed amolar to which was attached the process, including the Mt . ?Pt i i^Mjff^gg Krf ^HHa K- ^«1 i*A. , ^B ^9 w*. u n r


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1910, booksubjectsurgery, bookyear1912