An illustrated encyclopædic medical dictionaryBeing a dictionary of the technical terms used by writers on medicine and the collateral sciences, in the Latin, English, French and German languages . NON-BONE, n. Ka^noSn-boSn. See under Bone. CANNOSTOM/E [Lankester] (Lat.), n. f. pi. Ka=n(ka=n)-no2a-tom(to2m)-e(a=-e2). An order of the Octdm^ralia. [L, 121.] CANNSTATT (Ger.), n. KaSnstaH. A place in Wiirtem-berg, near Stuttgart, of a mild, equable temperature, where thereare saline springs, the more important of which are the Wilhelms-brunnen (formerly called the Sulzerrainquelle)aa<l the two


An illustrated encyclopædic medical dictionaryBeing a dictionary of the technical terms used by writers on medicine and the collateral sciences, in the Latin, English, French and German languages . NON-BONE, n. Ka^noSn-boSn. See under Bone. CANNOSTOM/E [Lankester] (Lat.), n. f. pi. Ka=n(ka=n)-no2a-tom(to2m)-e(a=-e2). An order of the Octdm^ralia. [L, 121.] CANNSTATT (Ger.), n. KaSnstaH. A place in Wiirtem-berg, near Stuttgart, of a mild, equable temperature, where thereare saline springs, the more important of which are the Wilhelms-brunnen (formerly called the Sulzerrainquelle)aa<l the two Frbsch-nerschen Quellen (the Mdnnlein and the Weiblein). [A, 319 ;L, 49.] CANNUCCIA (It.), n. Kan-nutchi-a3. The Phragmites com-munis. [B, 121.] CANNULA (Lat.), n. f. Kai!n(ka»nynu(nu«)-la». Dim. of canna(q. v.). Gr., avKuTKot. Fr., canule, cannule. Ger., Caniile, Rohr-chen. It., c. Sp., cdnula. A tube (e. g., one that incloses a trocaror some other instrument for making a jiuncture. the latter to bewithdrawn after the puncture is made, in order that any liquidthat may be present may flow off through the c. ; a tracheotomytube, etc.). [A, 385 ; E.]—Bellocqs c, Belloqs c. (not Bellocs).. BELLOCQS cannula, (after SfiDILLOT AND LEGOUEST.) Fr., sonde de Bellocg (on Bellog). Syn. : Bellocq^s (or Belloqa)sound. An instrument used for plugging the posterior nares. Itconsists of a tube somewhat curved at one end and having a ringattached at the other end, traversed by a stylet which is continuouswith a piece of curved watqh-spring terminating in a button havingan eye for carrying a thread. The stylet having been pulled backuntil the button closes the end of the tube, the instrument is passedalong the floor of the nasal passage into the pharynx ; the stylet isthen pressed farther into the tube, and a finger passed in by themouth guides the button, armed with the thread, past the softpalate ; the thread is then brought out through the mouth, a pieceof sponge or a wad of lint is sec


Size: 1737px × 1439px
Photo credit: © The Reading Room / Alamy / Afripics
License: Licensed
Model Released: No

Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade1890, booksubjectmedicine, bookyear189