Surgical treatment; a practical treatise on the therapy of surgical diseases for the use of practitioners and students of surgery . Fig. 826.—Sclera Fig. 827.—Resection of Outer Wall of Orbit. Showing incision which spares the facial nerve from injury. If the incision is confined to the external orbital triangle no damage of the nerve is sustained. ferred. The orbit, posterior to the eyeball, even to the nasal side, may beexposed. This operation is done for the treatment of disease and the removalof tumors. The filaments of the facial nerve should be spared as much as 16-4 SURGICAL
Surgical treatment; a practical treatise on the therapy of surgical diseases for the use of practitioners and students of surgery . Fig. 826.—Sclera Fig. 827.—Resection of Outer Wall of Orbit. Showing incision which spares the facial nerve from injury. If the incision is confined to the external orbital triangle no damage of the nerve is sustained. ferred. The orbit, posterior to the eyeball, even to the nasal side, may beexposed. This operation is done for the treatment of disease and the removalof tumors. The filaments of the facial nerve should be spared as much as 16-4 SURGICAL TREATMENT possible. If lines are drawn from tire upper and lower borders of the orbitalrim, backward to the condyle of the lower jaw, the triangle thus enclosed willbe found to be quite free from facial nerve trunks. The incision through thesoft parts should lie within this triangle. A curved incision begins in the eyebrow, at the front of the temporalridge, above the external angular process, passes downward, making a curvewith its convexity forward, to the outer border of the orbit, and thence passesdownward and backward along the upper border of th
Size: 1363px × 1834px
Photo credit: © The Reading Room / Alamy / Afripics
License: Licensed
Model Released: No
Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1920, booksubjectsurgery, bookyear1920