. Modern surgery, general and operative. page of the radial pulse. It is well to have a blood-pressure apparatus on the free arm of the donorand one on the free arm of the recipient. The pulse and general condition ofdonor and recipient are carefully watched. Angulation of the veins would cause clotting and must not be can tell that blood is passing by the improvement in color, in pulse, andin blood-pressure of the recipient and by the fulness of his vein near the in i case kept up the flow for thirty minutes. At the terminationof the operation the tubes are remove


. Modern surgery, general and operative. page of the radial pulse. It is well to have a blood-pressure apparatus on the free arm of the donorand one on the free arm of the recipient. The pulse and general condition ofdonor and recipient are carefully watched. Angulation of the veins would cause clotting and must not be can tell that blood is passing by the improvement in color, in pulse, andin blood-pressure of the recipient and by the fulness of his vein near the in i case kept up the flow for thirty minutes. At the terminationof the operation the tubes are removed, the veins tied, the tourniquet takenfrom the arm of the donor, and the wounds sutured and dressed. Major George Dorrance, U. S. A. whose experience is very large kindlywrote for me the following descriptions of the Kimpton-Brown method and theLewisohn citrate method. Kimpton-Brown Method 533 Kimpton-Brown Method.—The arms of the patient (recipient) and donorare carefully scrubbed and washed with alcohol, all surrounding parts being. Fig. 266.—The Kimpton-Brown tubes; two sizes, 100 and 250 cautery bulb(Mason, in Surgery, Gynecology, and Obstetrics).


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