Pathological techniqueW.B. Saunders, 1897 - 387 pages |
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Page 22
... surface of an organ should not be washed with water except to remove blood ; gently scrape the surface with the knife held obliquely . In cutting , the knife should be drawn , not pressed or shoved into the tissues . According to ...
... surface of an organ should not be washed with water except to remove blood ; gently scrape the surface with the knife held obliquely . In cutting , the knife should be drawn , not pressed or shoved into the tissues . According to ...
Page 27
... surface of the cerebrum , and then to make the examination of the body before removing the brain . In this way any change in the blood - supply of the cerebral vessels would be observed . Opening of the Abdominal Cavity . - In the exam ...
... surface of the cerebrum , and then to make the examination of the body before removing the brain . In this way any change in the blood - supply of the cerebral vessels would be observed . Opening of the Abdominal Cavity . - In the exam ...
Page 29
... surface of the incision into the abdomen , noting the thickness and color of the fat - tissue and the condition of the muscles . Inspection of the Abdominal Cavity . - The character of any fluid present should be determined and its ...
... surface of the incision into the abdomen , noting the thickness and color of the fat - tissue and the condition of the muscles . Inspection of the Abdominal Cavity . - The character of any fluid present should be determined and its ...
Page 33
... surface of the right border of the heart . It should be carried to the end of the ventricle , which does not reach quite to the apex of the heart . The second incision begins about the middle of the first , just above the insertion of ...
... surface of the right border of the heart . It should be carried to the end of the ventricle , which does not reach quite to the apex of the heart . The second incision begins about the middle of the first , just above the insertion of ...
Page 36
... surface of the valve . Then the nozzle of a syringe is introduced through the aortic valve and water forced in so as to float the mitral curtains up . The test , however , is very unreliable , because the parts cannot be placed under ...
... surface of the valve . Then the nozzle of a syringe is introduced through the aortic valve and water forced in so as to float the mitral curtains up . The test , however , is very unreliable , because the parts cannot be placed under ...
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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