Plastic surgery; its principles and practice . Fig. 214.—Complete harelip and cleft palate, right side.—i. There are ten children inthe family, the second and tenth had harelip and cleft palate. Before operation. Notethe projecting intermaxillary bone. 2. One year after operation. Too much allowancewas made for shrinkage of the scar, and the excess of projecting vermillion border should beremoved to make the lip perfect. intermaxillary bone with the maxilla, without malformation of the hardor soft palate. HARELIP AND CLEFT PALATE 257 B. Complete cleft palate may be subdivided into (i) Single {
Plastic surgery; its principles and practice . Fig. 214.—Complete harelip and cleft palate, right side.—i. There are ten children inthe family, the second and tenth had harelip and cleft palate. Before operation. Notethe projecting intermaxillary bone. 2. One year after operation. Too much allowancewas made for shrinkage of the scar, and the excess of projecting vermillion border should beremoved to make the lip perfect. intermaxillary bone with the maxilla, without malformation of the hardor soft palate. HARELIP AND CLEFT PALATE 257 B. Complete cleft palate may be subdivided into (i) Single {uni-lateral) clejt palate, which is usually associated with a complete harelip. Pig. 215.—Complete harelip and cleft palate, left side.—i. Before operation. Theintermaxillary bone on the left side projects markedly. 2. Two weeks after stitch marks will gradually disappear. on the same side, and projecting intermaxilla on that side. (2) Double(bilateral) cleft palate. This is usually associated with a complete
Size: 2576px × 970px
Photo credit: © The Reading Room / Alamy / Afripics
License: Licensed
Model Released: No
Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1910, booksubjectsurgeryplastic, booky