A system of instruction in X-ray methods and medical uses of light, hot-air, vibration and high-frequency currents - a pictorial system of teaching by clinical instruction plates with explanatory text (14776846493)
Zusammenfassung
Identifier: systemofinstruct00mone (find matches)
Title: A system of instruction in X-ray methods and medical uses of light, hot-air, vibration and high-frequency currents : a pictorial system of teaching by clinical instruction plates with explanatory text : a series of photographic clinics in standard uses of scientific therapeutic apparatus for surgical and medical practitioners : prepared especially for the post-graduate home study of surgeons, general physicians, dentists, dermatologists and specialists in the treatment of chronic diseases, and sanitarium practice
Year: 1902 (1900s)
Authors: Monell, S. H. (Samuel Howard), d. 1918
Subjects: Vibration X-rays Diagnosis, Radioscopic Thermotherapy Electrotherapeutics X-Ray Therapy Vibration Diagnosis
Publisher: New York : E.R. Pelton
Contributing Library: Francis A. Countway Library of Medicine
Digitizing Sponsor: Open Knowledge Commons and Harvard Medical School
Text Appearing Before Image:
Plate titi.—As an informal stndy in approximate localization observe that the fragmentof needle in this picture has a sharp and apparently nnmagnified shadow. It is thereforenearer the film than the bone.
Text Appearing After Image:
Plate 67.—Arrow points to bullet located in skull underneath pons. Verified by opera-tion and removal of bullet. ONE-MINUTE LOCALIZEE AND EXAMINING FEAME 223 and shifting the depthing-rod, the operator may prove the accuracyof the adjustment by returning the frame to its original position;and if the ball on the depthing-rod is in line with the upright markersat the same time that the bullet is in line between the same markerson its lower level, it proves the result. The real facility of the depth-ing-rod, which is an absolutely unique device, can hardly be madeplain till the student tries it himself. It works so simply that a childcan understand it by a glance at the apparatus. How to Readily Locate a Bullet in the Cranium.—^By some of themethods described the localization of a bullet in the head may beconsidered so difficult that attention should be here called to the prac-tical simplicity of the authors One-Minute Localizer in this par-ticular emergency. It is doubtful if any ot