Interstate medical journal . e of perception by the eye when using the fluoroscope in the use of plates is an injustice to the patient and tothe profession of roentgenology, for error is allowed to creep inwith disastrous results. The literature on gastric ulcers is virtually limited to a descrip-tion of hour-glass stomach, Haudeks niche, and roentgen signsand symptom complexes. The last are of comparatively little valueby themselves, because they are inferential, or, as classed by some,indirect. Holzknecht and his two renowned assistants, Jonas and Haudek,have compiled a series


Interstate medical journal . e of perception by the eye when using the fluoroscope in the use of plates is an injustice to the patient and tothe profession of roentgenology, for error is allowed to creep inwith disastrous results. The literature on gastric ulcers is virtually limited to a descrip-tion of hour-glass stomach, Haudeks niche, and roentgen signsand symptom complexes. The last are of comparatively little valueby themselves, because they are inferential, or, as classed by some,indirect. Holzknecht and his two renowned assistants, Jonas and Haudek,have compiled a series of tables of symptom complexes embodyingmature conclusions derived from inductive reasoning based on alarge experience. SYMPTOM COMPLEX I. 1. Stomach empty after six hours. Head of the bismuth columnin ascending colon. 2. Stomach shadow normal. Hubeny: Gastrointestinal Roentgenology 937 3. No increased peristalsis. No antiperistalsis. 4. No sensitive pressure point. 5. Hydrochloric acid —Normal Fig. 1.—Haudeks niche, with spasm on greater curvature.


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1910, bookidinter, booksubjectmedicine