. Local and regional anesthesia : with chapters on spinal, epidural, paravertebral, and parasacral analgesia, and on other applications of local and regional anesthesia to the surgery of the eye, ear, nose and throat, and to dental practice. Fig. 44.—Points of injections and lines of infiltration for resecting part of hand. (From Braun.) The disparity in the two shaded areas represents the overlapping of thefields of the two nerves (Fig. 41). A study of Figs. 42-46 will suggest the further application ofregional methods to the base of one or more fingers and parts of thehand, the large dots in


. Local and regional anesthesia : with chapters on spinal, epidural, paravertebral, and parasacral analgesia, and on other applications of local and regional anesthesia to the surgery of the eye, ear, nose and throat, and to dental practice. Fig. 44.—Points of injections and lines of infiltration for resecting part of hand. (From Braun.) The disparity in the two shaded areas represents the overlapping of thefields of the two nerves (Fig. 41). A study of Figs. 42-46 will suggest the further application ofregional methods to the base of one or more fingers and parts of thehand, the large dots indicating the points at which the nerves are to THE UPPER AND LOWER EXTREMITIES 24I be reached by subcutaneous injection for paraneural infiltration, thedotted lines marking the course for intradermal infiltration. As thenerves in the hand are all small it is practicable to use Solution No. r. Fig. 45.—Points of injections and lines of infiltration for anesthetizing abscess at baseof fingers. (From Braun.) throughout, but, if preferred, the paraneural or deep injections canbe made with per cent, novocain solution, using 10 to 20 minimsabout each nerve. It is evident that in extensive resections of the


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1910, booksubjectanesthe, bookyear1914