Surgical treatment; a practical treatise on the therapy of surgical diseases for the use of practitioners and students of surgery . ing the size and shape of theflap and the area of denudation. The wound should be sutured with horse-hair or celluloid-treated thread. A deep suture close to the coronary arterywill control it. A row of sutures should be used on both the facial and dentalsides of the lip. Every other suture should be passed deeply, the skin suturesjust to the mucous membrane, and the mucous membrane sutures just to the 270 SURGICAL TREATMENT skin. Every other suture should be for


Surgical treatment; a practical treatise on the therapy of surgical diseases for the use of practitioners and students of surgery . ing the size and shape of theflap and the area of denudation. The wound should be sutured with horse-hair or celluloid-treated thread. A deep suture close to the coronary arterywill control it. A row of sutures should be used on both the facial and dentalsides of the lip. Every other suture should be passed deeply, the skin suturesjust to the mucous membrane, and the mucous membrane sutures just to the 270 SURGICAL TREATMENT skin. Every other suture should be for superficial approximation. Thedeep sutures hold the muscle and prevent bleeding (Figs. 948 and 949). Care should be taken that no epithelium is left upon the surface to becovered. The tissue removed should come just to the skin. The preser-vation of the lines representing skin-mucous-membrane juncture should beexact. The vertical wound will ultimately contract, and to secure a finalperfect result, there should be a slight fulness of the lip directly below pins have no advantage over sutures, and many


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1920, booksubjectsurgery, bookyear1920