Transactions of the Southern Surgical and Gynecological Association (1910) (14788528583)
Summary
Identifier: transactionsofso2319sout (find matches)
Title: Transactions of the Southern Surgical and Gynecological Association
Year: 1910 (1910s)
Authors: Southern Surgical and Gynecological Association (U.S.)
Subjects: Surgery Gynecology Surgery Genital Diseases, Female
Publisher: (S.l.) : The Association
Contributing Library: Yale University, Cushing/Whitney Medical Library
Digitizing Sponsor: The College of Physicians of Philadelphia and the National Endowment for the Humanities
Text Appearing Before Image:
Fig. 5.—Case VI. (Man.) The shadows in this case simulate strongly stone, but onaccount of the external position and the penumbra were pronounced phleboliths.
Text Appearing After Image:
Fig. 8.—Case IX. To illustrate the tolerance of a clean pelvis to stone. ^Stonesnugly filling pelvis of the kidney and upper outlet of the ureter, never giving rise toany pain. R. C. BRYAN 89 mesenteric attachment posteriorly is linear, and runs fromthe left margin of the second lumbar vertebra to the rightiliac fossa; it thus crosses both ureters), produces an elonga-tion and stretching of its cross fibers, weakens the normalsupport which the ureter has anteriorly, a weakened wall,bulging or traction diverticulum is instituted, which, catchingcrystal-laden urine, cell detritus, and later inviting infec-tion, gives rise to primary stone formation. Kelly reports a stone originating primarily in the ureterabout a silk ligature. The list of intra-abdominal pathological lesions which canby virtue of inflammation have a direct influence upon, orjeopardize the normal physiological activity of, the ureteris necessarily numerous, too numerous to take up in detail.They are all based upon the