| John Harrison Curtis - 1829 - 260 pages
...whereby warm water may be injected; or they will admit to blow into the Eustachian tube, and so force the air into the barrel of the ear, and dilate the tube sufficiently for the discharge of the excrementitious matter that may be lodged there. The probes, which are of the same shape with the... | |
| Medicine, Eclectic - 1837 - 474 pages
...whereby warm water maybe injected; or they will admit to blow into the Eustachian tube, and so force the air into the barrel of the ear, and dilate the tube sufficiently for the discharge of the excrementitions matter that may be lodged there." (ljkil. Trans.) In order to perform this operation,... | |
| Medicine - 1844 - 578 pages
...warm water may be injected ; or they will admit to blow into the Eustachian tube, and so force the air into the barrel of the ear, and dilate the tube sufficiently for the discharge of the excrementitious matter that may be lodged there." He likewise used probes, of the same size as... | |
| James Yearsley - 1847 - 244 pages
...syringe, whereby warm water may be injected ; or they will admit to enter into the Eustachian tube, and to force air into the barrel of the ear, and dilate the tube sufficiently for the discharge of the excrementitious matter that may be lodged there. The probes, which are of the same size with the... | |
| sir William Robert W. Wilde - Ear - 1853 - 598 pages
...whereby warm water may be injected; or they will admit to blow into the Eustachian tube, and so force the air into the barrel of the ear, and dilate the tube sufficiently for the discharge of the excrementitious matter that may be lodged there." He likewise used probes, of the same size as... | |
| Peter Allen - 1872 - 342 pages
...this catheter warm water may be injected, or it will admit to blow into the Eustachian tube, and so to force air into the barrel of the ear, and dilate the tube sufficiently for the discharge of the excrementitous matter that may be lodged there." No simpler or better description of the purposes... | |
| Edward Baldwin Gleason - Ear - 1907 - 580 pages
...whereby warm water may be injected, or they will admit to blow into the Eustachian tube and so force the air into the barrel of the ear and dilate the tube sufficiently for the discharge of the excrementitious matter that may be lodged there." Cleland also used probes or bougies to explore... | |
| 1838 - 442 pages
...of the syringe he says — " or they will admit to blow into the Eustachian tube, and so force the air into the barrel of the ear, and dilate the tube sufficiently for the discharge of the excrementitious matter that may be lodged there." (Phil. Traits.} Deleau kept the construction... | |
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