War surgery of the faceA treatise on plastic restoration after facial injury by John BRoberts ..Prepared at the suggestion of the subsection on plastic and oral surgery connected with the office of the surgeon generalIllustrated with 256 figures . ior is free for theattachment of the soft or muscular palate. In the middle linethe two plates unite to form the posterior nasal spine. Thevertical plate, on its nasal surface, has ridges, called the inferiorand superior turbinated crests, for the inferior and middle tur-binated bones, resembling in this respect the inner surface of the 28 WAR SURGER


War surgery of the faceA treatise on plastic restoration after facial injury by John BRoberts ..Prepared at the suggestion of the subsection on plastic and oral surgery connected with the office of the surgeon generalIllustrated with 256 figures . ior is free for theattachment of the soft or muscular palate. In the middle linethe two plates unite to form the posterior nasal spine. Thevertical plate, on its nasal surface, has ridges, called the inferiorand superior turbinated crests, for the inferior and middle tur-binated bones, resembling in this respect the inner surface of the 28 WAR SURGERY OF THE FACE. superior maxilla. Below these crests are the inferior and middlemeatuses of the nose. The anterior part of this plate is pro-longed as the maxillary process, which covers parts of the open-ing of the antrum ; at the back part is seen the posterior palatinecanal. At the junction of the horizontal and vertical plates ofthe palate bone posteriorly is situated the tuberosity, or ptery-goid process, of the palate, which fits into the notch between thetwo pterygoid plates of the sphenoid. The middle portion of thevertical plate forms the sphenoidal process, at the base of which Frontal sinus. Middle turbinal (coneSuperior concha :. Nasal bone Frontal process ?• Lacrimal maxilla[Uncinate process Spheno palatine Superio Middl Pteryoroi —i Inferior meatus AnteriorWJr nasal spine Pterygoid hamulus ->^> SS™~ Incisive canal Horizontal plate of palate hone Palate process maxilla Fig. I.—Internal surface of maxilla andturbinal bones. (From Dixon.) is the spheno-palatine foramen separating it from the orbitalprocess above. The orbital process consists of a five-sided pro-jection containing a cavity or sinus in its interior. The surfacesare named maxillary, sphenoidal, and ethmoidal, because theyarticulate with these bones; and orbital and zygomatic, becauselooking toward these cavities. The palate articulates withsphenoid, ethmoid, superior maxillary, inferior tur


Size: 1595px × 1567px
Photo credit: © The Reading Room / Alamy / Afripics
License: Licensed
Model Released: No

Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1910, booksubjectsurgeryplastic, booky