The Human Ear and Its Diseases: A Practical Treatise Upon the Examination, Recognition, and Treatment of Affections of the Ear and Associate PartsBoericke & Tafel, 1882 - 526 ˹éÒ |
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acid action acute affected applied auditory auditory canal aural auricle base becomes blood body bone branch called canal catarrh catheter cause cells chronic closed cold condition connective considerable continued cotton covered cure deafness depression diminished direct discharge disease drum-head early Eustachian tube examination extends external fluid followed frequently give glands handle head hearing improve increased indicated inflammation inflation inner internal irritation labyrinth latter malleus mastoid meatus medicine membrana tympani middle ear morbid mouth move mucous membrane mucus muscles nasal necessary nerve nose occasionally occurs opening operation ossicles outward pain passes patient perforation persons pharynx portion position posterior present pressure produced purulent remedy removed seen severe side skin slight soft solution sometimes sore sound surface swelling symptoms thin throat tinnitus tion tissue treated treatment tumors tympanum ulceration usually vessels vibrations wall warm
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˹éÒ 3 - DR. WH The Human Ear and Its Diseases. A Practical Treatise upon the Examination, Recognition and Treatment of Affections of the Ear and Associate Parts, Prepared for the Instruction of Students and the Guidance of Physicians. By WH WINSLOW, MD, Ph.D., Oculist and Aurist to the Pittsburg Homoeopathic Hospital, etc., etc., with one hundred and thirty-eight illustrations.
˹éÒ 38 - It arises from the under surface of the apex of the petrous portion of the temporal bone, and from the...
˹éÒ 414 - It was the first thing in the morning and the last thing at night, till I confess it began to be something of a bore to me.
˹éÒ 412 - MD, of New York. In one handsome octavo volume of 274 pages, with 117 fine engravings. SEILER (CARL).
˹éÒ 450 - DB St. JOHN ROOSA, MA, MD Professor of Diseases of the Eye and Ear in the University of the City of New York; Surgeon to the Manhattan Eye and Ear Hospital; Consulting Surgeon to the Brooklyn Eye and Ear Hospital, &c., &c.
˹éÒ 487 - An auditory apparatus, hitherto perfectly normal, may become suddenly the seat of functional disturbances, consisting in noises of a variable nature, continuous or intermittent, and which may be accompanied, sooner or later, by a diminution in hearing.
˹éÒ 487 - ... left, and falling, and these may be attended with nausea, vomiting and syncope. 3. These manifestations which are often of intermittent type, are at last followed by deafness, gradually growing worse, and often the hearing is at last totally and suddenly lost. 4. All this tends to confirm the belief that the lesion which is the cause of these functional troubles is in the semicircular canals.
˹éÒ 36 - The interior of the tube is lined with mucous membrane continuous with that of the pharynx and the tympanic cavity ; and its calibre varies considerably in different parts of its course. It is narrowest at a point termed the isthmus, situated at the junction of the osseous and cartilaginous parts. As the tube is traced from the isthmus to the pharynx it gradually increases in calibre...
˹éÒ 382 - Free space of nasal passages. 3. Superior meatus. 4. Middle meatus. 5. Superior turbinated bone. 6. Middle turbinated bone. 7. Inferior turbinated bone. 8. Pharyngeal orifice of Eustachian tube.
˹éÒ 14 - Those connecting the various parts of its cartilage together. The former, the most important, are two in number, anterior and posterior. The anterior ligament extends from the process of the helix, to the root of the zygoma. The posterior ligament passes from the posterior surface of the concha, to the outer surface of the mastoid process of the temporal bone. A few fibres connect the tragus to the root of the zygoma.