. The pathological anatomy of the ear . , Chir. und Geburtsk. VII. 3. l^bl. — Wolf, Preuss. Vereins-Ztg. 35, 36. — Meniere, Article on Bony Sequestra observed in the differ-ent Parts of the Ear. Gaz. Med. de Paris. 1857. No. 33. — Hutchinson,Canstatts Jahresber. 1861. 3. S. 50. — /. 6>w&er, Wien. Med. — OJe?, Medicinske Arch. III. 1. 1866.— Von Troeltsch, zur Lehre von der Ohreneiterung. Arch. f. O. IV. S. 97-142. 1869. — /. Gruher, Zur Casuistik der Schliifen- / ^-^~-^ bein-Necrose. M. f. O. 1874. No. 9. (Case ofloss of the whole annulust
. The pathological anatomy of the ear . , Chir. und Geburtsk. VII. 3. l^bl. — Wolf, Preuss. Vereins-Ztg. 35, 36. — Meniere, Article on Bony Sequestra observed in the differ-ent Parts of the Ear. Gaz. Med. de Paris. 1857. No. 33. — Hutchinson,Canstatts Jahresber. 1861. 3. S. 50. — /. 6>w&er, Wien. Med. — OJe?, Medicinske Arch. III. 1. 1866.— Von Troeltsch, zur Lehre von der Ohreneiterung. Arch. f. O. IV. S. 97-142. 1869. — /. Gruher, Zur Casuistik der Schliifen- / ^-^~-^ bein-Necrose. M. f. O. 1874. No. 9. (Case ofloss of the whole annulustympanicus and a portionof the squama through theexternal meatus, in a childtwo years old.) — Boeters,Necrose des Gehorlaby-rinths. Diss. Inaug. Halle, 1875. — Also the alreadyquoted text books of otol-og\ and the sjXcial jour-nals. Caries, or ulcer-ative ostitis, at-tacks, of all thebones of the 2. the temporal bone Carious Perforation of the Anterior Wall of the mOSt frequently; it is very often bilat-. Pyraniid at the spot where the pars petrosa of thetemporal bone passes into the pars squamosa. Cor-responding with this spot on the lower surface of the eral ancl aSSOciatCCldura mater were masses of granulations, the uppersurface of the dura mater being unchanged. Deathfrom pyemia. For history and dissection, see Archivfiir Ohrenheilk., II., S. 36. with simultaneouscaries of otherbones of the points of preference for caries are the mastoid pro-cess, the median portion of the upper posterior wall THE TEMPORAL BONE. 13 of the meatus (floor of the antrum mastoideum), andthe walls of the tympanum, preferably its roof; lessfrequently the pars petrosa is attacked and least fre-quently the meatus auditorius internus. Exception-ally extensive caries can exist in the petrous bone.
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Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade1870, bookidpa, booksubjecteardiseases