General and dental pathology with special reference to etiology and pathologic anatomy; a treatise for students and practitioners . oused becausethe tooth was slightly tender to percussion. While a slight infection waspresent in this tooth, the main difficulty was, however, in the second bicuspid(Fig. 441). This patient was in such an exhausted condition as to requireanywhere from sixteen to twenty-four hours of sleep a day, and even aftersuch a long period of quietness she would awake with a feeling of fatigue asintense as it seemed to be at the time of retiring. The lower second bicuspidwas


General and dental pathology with special reference to etiology and pathologic anatomy; a treatise for students and practitioners . oused becausethe tooth was slightly tender to percussion. While a slight infection waspresent in this tooth, the main difficulty was, however, in the second bicuspid(Fig. 441). This patient was in such an exhausted condition as to requireanywhere from sixteen to twenty-four hours of sleep a day, and even aftersuch a long period of quietness she would awake with a feeling of fatigue asintense as it seemed to be at the time of retiring. The lower second bicuspidwas extracted, and in the course of a few weeks the symptoms entirely dis-appeared. She has since reported that eight hours of sleep satisfy her com-pletely. Case 8 (Fig. 442) Man, aged about forty-five, gave a history of lameness in the right shoul-der, torticollis, and a continued toxic condition. He did not have to state 5G0 DENTAL PATHOLOGY that he was a sick man—it was self-evident. The roots of the first molarshowed an intensified septic process. The tooth was extracted, and therefollowed in due time a marked Fig. 442.—Case 8.


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1920, booksubjectpathology, bookyear19