. American practice of surgery ; a complete system of the science and art of surgery . ^ little, if any, shock after the Fig. 119.—Diagram Showing the Relative Positions of the Stomach, Duodenimi, .Jejunum, and Trans-verse Colon after the Completion of Posterior Gastro-enterostomy. (The Moynihan-Mayo method.) He is relatively free from pain, and can usually sit up in bed, with the aid of ahead-rest, a few hours after the operation. The method should not be employed in making a pyloroplasty. It should not be used in making a cholec3^stenterostomy. The edges of the gastric opening ar
. American practice of surgery ; a complete system of the science and art of surgery . ^ little, if any, shock after the Fig. 119.—Diagram Showing the Relative Positions of the Stomach, Duodenimi, .Jejunum, and Trans-verse Colon after the Completion of Posterior Gastro-enterostomy. (The Moynihan-Mayo method.) He is relatively free from pain, and can usually sit up in bed, with the aid of ahead-rest, a few hours after the operation. The method should not be employed in making a pyloroplasty. It should not be used in making a cholec3^stenterostomy. The edges of the gastric opening are perfectly smooth and the amount of cica-tricial tissue resulting from the operation is very small. The only objections to the operation are to be found in the facts that therubber ligature employed sometimes becomes brittle with age and that there isnot immediately produced a communication between the stomach and the in-testine. SURGICAL DISEASES OF STOMACH AND (ESOPHAGUS. 355 With increasing cxixM-icnce the surgeon takes less and less kindly to mechan-ical moans in all forms of intestinal surgery, and for this reason, mor
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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1900, booksubjectsurgery, bookyear1906