A text-book of the diseases of the ear and adjacent organs . Fig. 107.—Accumulationof Fluid Effusion inthe Inferior Portionof theTympanic Cavity,marked by a brightLine. In a young man duringthe course of a severecold in the head. Curedby Politzerization. Fig. 108.—Accumulationof Effusion in theInferior Portion ofthe Tympanic Cavity. The line of the fluid levelis curved and wavy. Ina woman 40 years of ageand syphilitic. Removalof exudation by para-centesis. Fig. 109.—Change ofPosition of the Lineof the Fluid Level ofthe Exudation by In-clining the Head back-wards. In the same woman asFig. 108.


A text-book of the diseases of the ear and adjacent organs . Fig. 107.—Accumulationof Fluid Effusion inthe Inferior Portionof theTympanic Cavity,marked by a brightLine. In a young man duringthe course of a severecold in the head. Curedby Politzerization. Fig. 108.—Accumulationof Effusion in theInferior Portion ofthe Tympanic Cavity. The line of the fluid levelis curved and wavy. Ina woman 40 years of ageand syphilitic. Removalof exudation by para-centesis. Fig. 109.—Change ofPosition of the Lineof the Fluid Level ofthe Exudation by In-clining the Head back-wards. In the same woman asFig. 108. like a hair stretched across the membrane, sometimes shiningwhite (Fig. 107), extends either concave, convex, or wavy (Fig. 108),or the fluid may be bounded by two lines, which, commencing atthe inferior extremity of the handle of the malleus, diverge down-wards with a slight curvature (Fig. 110). Frequently the line offluid level is visible only in front of the handle (Fig. Ill), or onlybehind it, or it may be that it is seen only under a certain li


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade1890, booksubjecteardiseases, bookyear