Bulletin of the Lying-in Hospital of the City of New York, Volumes 10-11 |
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Page 14
... wall . Its lower end is purposely kept about 2 cm . above the umbilicus to avoid weakening the umbilical ring . A considerable number of childbearing women have a small umbilical hernia without being caused any inconvenience . In some ...
... wall . Its lower end is purposely kept about 2 cm . above the umbilicus to avoid weakening the umbilical ring . A considerable number of childbearing women have a small umbilical hernia without being caused any inconvenience . In some ...
Page 15
... walls of the abdomen , rotating the uterus so that its anterior wall looks directly forward and so regulating his pres- sure that the uterus is held well up the abdominal opening until it is emptied of its contents , child , placenta ...
... walls of the abdomen , rotating the uterus so that its anterior wall looks directly forward and so regulating his pres- sure that the uterus is held well up the abdominal opening until it is emptied of its contents , child , placenta ...
Page 17
... wall into accurate apposition , yet avoiding tension which would blanch and construct the tissues . The sutures are tied in three knots and cut short to the knot . The entrance and exit of. Fig . 2. The first two sutures in place . Fig ...
... wall into accurate apposition , yet avoiding tension which would blanch and construct the tissues . The sutures are tied in three knots and cut short to the knot . The entrance and exit of. Fig . 2. The first two sutures in place . Fig ...
Page 20
... wall against the uterine wall is thus avoided and likewise the risk of adhesions between the two as was the case where the tight abdominal binder was employed . The uterus is not de- livered from the abdomen at any time . The patient is ...
... wall against the uterine wall is thus avoided and likewise the risk of adhesions between the two as was the case where the tight abdominal binder was employed . The uterus is not de- livered from the abdomen at any time . The patient is ...
Page 21
... wall is very thin ; no important struc- tures are divided and the tissues are quite elastic so that a small opening is all that is necessary for the delivery of the child . The small abdominal opening offers much less chance for the ...
... wall is very thin ; no important struc- tures are divided and the tissues are quite elastic so that a small opening is all that is necessary for the delivery of the child . The small abdominal opening offers much less chance for the ...
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Common terms and phrases
abdominal Cesarean abortion Amer April Attending Surgeon August babies birth bladder blood bone breech cause cavity cells cent cervix Cesarean section child clinical complications condition contracted convulsions culture d'Obst death delivered delivery diagnosis died dilated disease eclampsia ectopic ectopic pregnancy epiphysis examination extraperitoneal fetus forceps fracture Geburtsh growth Gynäk Gynec hemorrhage humerus incision infant infection Journal July June kidney labor lower Lying-In Hospital maternal Medical Jour medium membranes method minute and cultivated months mortality mother nitrogen normal observed Obst occurred operation pains patient pelvis perineum peritoneal peritoneum physician placenta previa position post-partum present primiparae puerperal puerperium reaction Ringer solution ROSS MCPHERSON rupture scopolamine sepsis September serum showed spina bifida spontaneous stillbirths Surg sutures symptoms syphilis tion tissue toxemia of pregnancy treatment Twilight Sleep ureter urine uterine uterus vaginal vomiting wall Washed in Ringer woman women
Popular passages
Page 258 - Obstetrics, edited by Joseph B. DeLee, AM, MD, Professor of Obstetrics Northwestern University Medical School, with the collaboration of Herbert M. Stowe, MD Series Isl3.
Page 199 - Principles and Practice of Obstetrics, by Joseph B. De Lee, AM, MD, Professor of Obstetrics at the Northwestern University Medical School.
Page 106 - Medicine, the meeting in each case being held under the supervision of the Public Health Education Committee of the Medical Society of the County of New York.
Page 121 - PRINCIPLES AND PRACTICE OF OBSTETRICS. By JOSEPH B. DELEE, AM, MD Professor of Obstetrics at the Northwestern University Medical School.
Page 30 - The toxemias of pregnancy can be attributed neither to failure in diaminization of the amino-acids, nor to the moderate degree of acidosis observed. The nature of the toxin or toxins therefore remains unknown. The nature of the functional disturbances which cause the abnormal nitrogen metabolism observed also still awaits a satisfactorily conclusive explanation. Nevertheless the constancy of the low urea ratios in the urine in eclampsia, and of high ammonia in pernicious vomiting, lends decided support...
Page 15 - ... the mother's face. Then with the middle and index-fingers of the right hand astride its neck and with the same fingers of the left hand in its mouth, making traction on its lower jaw, the head is carefully delivered so that there is no sudden jolting or lacerating of the uterus in its delivery.
Page 198 - Nursing Obstetric and Gynecologic Nursing. By EDWARD P. DAVIS, AM, MD, Professor of Obstetrics in the Jefferson Medical College and Philadelphia Polyclinic ; Obstetrician and Gynecologist, Philadelphia Hospital.
Page 211 - The duration of pregnancy in lunar months is equal to the height of the uterus in centimeters divided by 3.5.
Page 9 - Surgery at the Sixty-Seventh Annual Session of the American Medical Association, Detroit, June, 1916.
Page 61 - Zappert on the one hand believed that it was due to a lesion of the central nervous system or of the peripheral nerves...