Surgical treatment; a practical treatise on the therapy of surgical diseases for the use of practitioners and students of surgery . Fig. 1361.— union for the spur has been made, the bowel dropped back and sewed to the margin of the Fig. 1362.— loop has been cut off. The glass rod is still left under a bridge of intestine to give support. by one or two sutures, the suture nearest to the bowel catching it also, andholding up into the wound a well-relaxed loop of sigmoid. The extrudedbowel is then fastened to the skin by a continuous suture (Fig. 1361). T


Surgical treatment; a practical treatise on the therapy of surgical diseases for the use of practitioners and students of surgery . Fig. 1361.— union for the spur has been made, the bowel dropped back and sewed to the margin of the Fig. 1362.— loop has been cut off. The glass rod is still left under a bridge of intestine to give support. by one or two sutures, the suture nearest to the bowel catching it also, andholding up into the wound a well-relaxed loop of sigmoid. The extrudedbowel is then fastened to the skin by a continuous suture (Fig. 1361). THE ABDOMEN 689 Gauze is placed between the rod and the skin. If necessary a glass tube isat once fastened into the bowel. If there is no urgency, the bowel is not sewed to the skin; the rod and thefour stay sutures keep it in place. Vaselin is not used lest it preventadhesions. The bowel is covered with rubber protective, and a wall ofpads laid about it to prevent pressure. After adhesions have formed, inthree or four days, or preferably after a week, the projecting bowel is cut off(Fig. 1362). Bleeding may require a running suture around the cut edge,usually no suture is needed. The bridge between is left to be supportedby the rod for a week,


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1920, booksubjectsurgery, bookyear1920