The international encyclopaedia of surgery; a systematic treatise on the theory and practice of surgery . The heart, showing the incised wound of the right auricle.(Spec. 4870, sec. 1, A. M. M.) The sternum, showing an oblique incisioathrough it, which penetrated the right auricleof the heart. (Spec. 4869, sec. 1, A. M. M.) once, gasping for breath, with his face deadly pale, and expired in about eight —The knife-blade, after cutting cleanly through the sternum, had traversedthe mediastinum, and freely opened the right auricle of the heart. The pericardiumand the mediastinum we


The international encyclopaedia of surgery; a systematic treatise on the theory and practice of surgery . The heart, showing the incised wound of the right auricle.(Spec. 4870, sec. 1, A. M. M.) The sternum, showing an oblique incisioathrough it, which penetrated the right auricleof the heart. (Spec. 4869, sec. 1, A. M. M.) once, gasping for breath, with his face deadly pale, and expired in about eight —The knife-blade, after cutting cleanly through the sternum, had traversedthe mediastinum, and freely opened the right auricle of the heart. The pericardiumand the mediastinum were filled with extravasated blood, and the cardiac cavities wereempty. The specimens are represented in the accompanying wood-cuts (Figs. 432and 433). See Medical and Surgical History, etc., First Surgical Vol., p. 527. Ibid., p. 528. 3 Catalogue, p. 453. ^ Catalogue, p. 454. * Medical and Surgical History of the War of the Rebellion, First Surg. Vol., p. 534; CircularNo. 3, S. G. 0., 1871, p. 91. 228 INJURIES OF BLOODVESSELS. The traumatic lesions of the heart consist of punctured and


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade1880, bookpublishernewyo, bookyear1881