. Electricity in diseases of the eye, ear, nose and throat . Fig. 150.—Bruenings Suction Spatula. The man was an upholsterer, and after the habitof his craft, he had for convenience filled his mouthwith tacks. He must have swallowed four, as theaj-ray showed a large-headed upholsterers tack inthe left bronchus, shaft Fig. 151.—Bruenings Autoscopic Spatula. 548 ELECTEICITY IN DISEASES OF THE THROAT. Bruening devised an instrument for dilatationof the stricture. It was complete up to the shaftand removed the object, than which, there could beno more difficult operation. Many other inter


. Electricity in diseases of the eye, ear, nose and throat . Fig. 150.—Bruenings Suction Spatula. The man was an upholsterer, and after the habitof his craft, he had for convenience filled his mouthwith tacks. He must have swallowed four, as theaj-ray showed a large-headed upholsterers tack inthe left bronchus, shaft Fig. 151.—Bruenings Autoscopic Spatula. 548 ELECTEICITY IN DISEASES OF THE THROAT. Bruening devised an instrument for dilatationof the stricture. It was complete up to the shaftand removed the object, than which, there could beno more difficult operation. Many other interesting cases can be found inthe literature reported, notably by Moyer, of Bos-ton ; Jackson, of Pittsburg; Casselberry and Ingalls,of Chicago, and others. Malignant and other diseases of the trachea andoesophagus and nearby parts can be more certainlydiagnosed by this means which direct electric illu-mination has placed in our hands. The day of radi-cal surgical removal of foreign bodies has passedand the dawn of the time when many more caseswill be looked at directly, through the means underpresent discussion, has come. ELECTRIC LIGHT IN DISEASES OF THE RESPIRATORY ORGANS. W. Freudenthal, of New York, says: Afterit had been known that cultures of tubercle bacilliwere destroyed by the sunlight (E. Coch) it wasfound


Size: 2696px × 927px
Photo credit: © Reading Room 2020 / Alamy / Afripics
License: Licensed
Model Released: No

Keywords: ., boo, bookcentury1900, bookdecade1910, booksubjecteye, bookyear1912