Pathological techniqueW.B. Saunders, 1897 - 387 pages |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 83
Page 28
... , introduce the first and second fingers of the left hand , and while making strong upward and. FIG . 5. - Primary incision in the body ( Nauwerck ) . FIG . 6. - Heart , showing incisions . 28 PATHOLOGICAL TECHNIQUE .
... , introduce the first and second fingers of the left hand , and while making strong upward and. FIG . 5. - Primary incision in the body ( Nauwerck ) . FIG . 6. - Heart , showing incisions . 28 PATHOLOGICAL TECHNIQUE .
Page 30
... second down ( about 5 mm . distant ) with a scalpel held nearly hori- zontal , so that as one cartilage is cut through the handle of the scalpel will strike the next below and prevent the blade from penetrating too far and injuring the ...
... second down ( about 5 mm . distant ) with a scalpel held nearly hori- zontal , so that as one cartilage is cut through the handle of the scalpel will strike the next below and prevent the blade from penetrating too far and injuring the ...
Page 31
... second joint . The advantage of this method is that there is much less danger of wounding the large vessels at the base of the neck , and thus of mingling blood with any exudation which may happen to be present in the pleural cavities ...
... second joint . The advantage of this method is that there is much less danger of wounding the large vessels at the base of the neck , and thus of mingling blood with any exudation which may happen to be present in the pleural cavities ...
Page 32
... second year , after which time it usually gradually disappears . Opening of the Pericardium . - To open the pericar- dium , seize the sac near the middle with fingers or forceps , snip through the wall with knife or scissors , and with ...
... second year , after which time it usually gradually disappears . Opening of the Pericardium . - To open the pericar- dium , seize the sac near the middle with fingers or forceps , snip through the wall with knife or scissors , and with ...
Page 33
... second incision begins about the middle of the first , just above the insertion of the anterior papillary muscle ( which should not be cut ) , and is carried through the pulmonary valve well over on the left side along the left border ...
... second incision begins about the middle of the first , just above the insertion of the anterior papillary muscle ( which should not be cut ) , and is carried through the pulmonary valve well over on the left side along the left border ...
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Other editions - View all
Pathological Technique: A Practical Manual for Workers in Pathological ... Frank Burr Mallory No preview available - 2016 |
Common terms and phrases
95 per cent absolute alcohol acetic acid acid fuchsin agar-agar alum alum-hematoxylin bacillus bacteria blood blood-serum blue bouillon Canada balsam carmine celloidin celloidin sections cells chlorid colonies color cover-glass preparations cover-slip culture-medium cultures Decolorize Dehydrate diagnosis differential stain dilute Diseases dissolved Distilled water drop eosin ether examination exudate fibrin filter-paper filtered fixing reagent formaldehyde gelatin gentian-violet glass glycerin grams granules heat hematoxylin hyaline hydrochloric acid imbedding incision incubator infected inoculation iodin knife lesions medium methylene-blue solution microscopic microtome mixture mounted Müller's fluid neuroglia-fibers nuclei obtained oil of cloves orcein organism osmic acid paraffin paraffin sections pathological picric acid pieces of tissue pipette placed plates potassium protoplasm reaction red corpuscles removed safranin saturated aqueous solution slide sodium solu specimens sputum Stain sections sterilized surface test-tubes thick tion tissue-elements tube twenty-four hours typhoid Unna's usually Wash in water Xylol Xylol balsam Zenker's fluid