The practice of obstetrics, designed for the use of students and practitioners of medicine . Fig. 1097.—Effect of the Four DeepIncisions of the Cervix upon Dilata-tion. Fig. logS.—Authors Case of DeepBilateral Incisions of the CervixThirteen Months after Repair Has Taken PlaceIN the Bilateral Incisions. immediate danger, however, the supravaginal portion still being present, thetwo procedures may be combined with advantage; that is, mechanical dilatationuntil the internal os has been obliterated and rapid completion of the dilatationby deep incisions. There is one condition in


The practice of obstetrics, designed for the use of students and practitioners of medicine . Fig. 1097.—Effect of the Four DeepIncisions of the Cervix upon Dilata-tion. Fig. logS.—Authors Case of DeepBilateral Incisions of the CervixThirteen Months after Repair Has Taken PlaceIN the Bilateral Incisions. immediate danger, however, the supravaginal portion still being present, thetwo procedures may be combined with advantage; that is, mechanical dilatationuntil the internal os has been obliterated and rapid completion of the dilatationby deep incisions. There is one condition in which they should always be INCISIONS OF THE CERVIX, VAGINA, AND VULVA. 909 avoided; namely, in arrest of the after-coming head during breech delivery, orafter version in multiparse. Here the resistance is at the internal os, and any butthe most superficial incisions would be likely to result in extension to uterinerupture during the process of delivery. Operation: The patient being in thelithotomy position, the free edge of the os is fixed between two bullet forceps,and under the g


Size: 1836px × 1361px
Photo credit: © The Reading Room / Alamy / Afripics
License: Licensed
Model Released: No

Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1910, booksubjectobstetrics, bookyear1