A Manual of the Operations of Surgery. Joseph Bell
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The line 3 in Plate I. shows the direction required. It will not be necessary to carry the incision so far up for the external as for the common iliac.
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John Bell's
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Poland,
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Mr. W. Thomson's most interesting paper on this subject is full of information down to the latest date.
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W. Zehender—Monatsbl. für Augenheilkunde. 1868.
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Butcher,
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See case of recurrence, Fergusson's
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For details see article "Amputation" in Cooper's
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See a most interesting foot-note to Professor Lister's paper on "Amputation," in Holmes's
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This line is placed too low down; it should be in the middle third of the thigh.
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This line is placed too low down; it should be in the middle third of the thigh.
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As the surgeon will find it most convenient to stand on his own right side of the limb to be removed, the knife will be entered on the palmar side of the radius of the right arm, of the ulna of the left.
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Teale,
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Johnson's folio ed., p. 342.
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Gross's
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Spence's
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Gross's