Surgical treatment; a practical treatise on the therapy of surgical diseases for the use of practitioners and students of surgery . ^S^^^^. Fig. -Arrangement of Silver Wire and Strands of Silk Thread for theDrainage of Ascitic Fluid into the Abdominal Wall. by three or four strands of silk, caught in the wire and spread out under theskin as six or eight drains (Fig. 1219). Blad has used successfully a square of fascia, taken from the thigh, rolledinto a tube, and inserted into the peritoneal cavity in the right lumbar tube should be about 3 cm. (1^4 inches) long and cm. (
Surgical treatment; a practical treatise on the therapy of surgical diseases for the use of practitioners and students of surgery . ^S^^^^. Fig. -Arrangement of Silver Wire and Strands of Silk Thread for theDrainage of Ascitic Fluid into the Abdominal Wall. by three or four strands of silk, caught in the wire and spread out under theskin as six or eight drains (Fig. 1219). Blad has used successfully a square of fascia, taken from the thigh, rolledinto a tube, and inserted into the peritoneal cavity in the right lumbar tube should be about 3 cm. (1^4 inches) long and cm. (% inch) indiameter, and terminate in the lumbar muscles. A piece of vein (saphenous), resected from the patient would serve betterthan any of these substances, all of which are doomed to become encysted inconnective tissue. Thus far, the implantation of foreign materials as abovedescribed have given about an equal proportion of failures and successes. Anastomosis of the saphenous vein with the peritoneum was devised byRoutte for carrying off the ascitic fluid directly into the centripetal circula-tion. An incision is begun about
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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1920, booksubjectsurgery, bookyear1920