Clinical lectures on the surgical diseases of the urinary organs . OF THE WHOLE OR REMAININGPORTIONS OF THE PROSTATE IN CASES PREVIOUSLYSUBJECTED TO OPERATION BY OTHER METHODS - 192 XI. RESULTS OF THE OPERATION OF TOTAL ENUCLEATION OF THE PROSTATE, WITH SOME CONCLUDING REMARKS - 204XII. TUMOURS OF THE BLADDER - - - - 2 [3 XIII. CYSTITIS AND PROSTATITIS - 237 vii viii VTENTS PAGB XIV. STONE IN THE BLADDER: ITS VARIETIES, SYMP1 AMD Dl IGNSIS .... 256\\. OPERATIONS FOR REMOVAL 01 5T0N1 IN MiK 11 \i>l>i R 272XVI. THE oiKR ,tN 01 UTHOLAPAXV - 287xvii. LITHOLAPAXY: COMPLICATIONS AND DIFFICULTI


Clinical lectures on the surgical diseases of the urinary organs . OF THE WHOLE OR REMAININGPORTIONS OF THE PROSTATE IN CASES PREVIOUSLYSUBJECTED TO OPERATION BY OTHER METHODS - 192 XI. RESULTS OF THE OPERATION OF TOTAL ENUCLEATION OF THE PROSTATE, WITH SOME CONCLUDING REMARKS - 204XII. TUMOURS OF THE BLADDER - - - - 2 [3 XIII. CYSTITIS AND PROSTATITIS - 237 vii viii VTENTS PAGB XIV. STONE IN THE BLADDER: ITS VARIETIES, SYMP1 AMD Dl IGNSIS .... 256\\. OPERATIONS FOR REMOVAL 01 5T0N1 IN MiK 11 \i>l>i R 272XVI. THE oiKR ,tN 01 UTHOLAPAXV - 287xvii. LITHOLAPAXY: COMPLICATIONS AND DIFFICULTIES EN-COUNTERED i\ CONNEXION mi kiwi 1 11 - - 303Will. CUTTING OPERATIONS FOR VESICAL STON1 - - 320XIX. THE AUTHORS ivikiimi 01 OPERATIONS FOR STONE N 1 m BLADDER, wi 1 H COGW ITISTICS - 333 \\. Rl N.\! c tLCULUS - - - 340XXL IMPACTED CALCULUS OF nil URETER, AND SOME OTHER CAUSES < I 0BS1 RU< 1 ION - - 356XXII. Rl \\l TUMOURS XXIII. MOVAB1 B KID! - - - 382 PYON1 PHR< »SIS - - ,;oi \\\. rUBERCULOSIS 01 rHI URINARY ORi - 405 INDEX - - - - 4-1. LECTURE I STRICTURE OF THE URETHRA: ITS VARIETIES, PATH-OLOGY, SYMPTOMS, SECONDARY RESULTS, ANDDIAGNOSIS Gentlemen, I propose directing your attention to-day to strictureof the urethra. It is one of the most important of thesurgical disorders of the genito-urinary organs. It is the mostcommon of those diseases that you are called on to deal within practice, since at one or other period of life the vastmajority of the male population suffers from that conditionwhich most frequently gives rise to it. If neglected orimproperly treated, it is most far-reaching in its injuriousconsequences, through the morbid pathological changesthereby produced. A detailed description of the anatomy of the urethra wouldbe foreign to the scope of these lectures; but there are certainfeatures in its conformation to which I wish briefly to drawyour attention. The urethra in the adult male is about 8 inches in is commonly divided into three part


Size: 1858px × 1345px
Photo credit: © The Reading Room / Alamy / Afripics
License: Licensed
Model Released: No

Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1900, bookpublishernewyorkwilliamwood