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    Whether the diseased parotid gland itself or a lymphatic body lying in connexion with it, be the subject of operation, it seldom happens that the temporo-maxillary branch of the external carotid, F, escapes the knife.
- Joseph Maclise, Surgical Anatomy (1857) [full text]

    Whether the diseased parotid gland itself or a lymphatic body lying in connexion with it, be the subject of operation, it seldom happens that the temporo-maxillary branch of the external carotid, F, escapes the knife.

    - Joseph Maclise, Surgical Anatomy (1857) [full text]

     
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    - Joseph Maclise, Surgical Anatomy (1857) [full text]

    - Joseph Maclise, Surgical Anatomy (1857) [full text]

     
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    In the human body there does not exist any such space as cavity, properly so called. Every space is occupied by its contents. The thoracic space is completely filled by its viscera, which, in mass, take a perfect cast or model of its interior. The thoracic viscera lie so closely to one another, that they respectively influence the form and dimensions of each other.
- Joseph Maclise, Surgical Anatomy (1857) [full text]

    In the human body there does not exist any such space as cavity, properly so called. Every space is occupied by its contents. The thoracic space is completely filled by its viscera, which, in mass, take a perfect cast or model of its interior. The thoracic viscera lie so closely to one another, that they respectively influence the form and dimensions of each other.

    - Joseph Maclise, Surgical Anatomy (1857) [full text]

     
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    Plate 7: the surgical relationship of parts lying in the vicinity of the common carotid artery, at the point of its bifurcation into external and internal carotids.
- Joseph Maclise, Surgical Anatomy (1857) [full text]

    Plate 7: the surgical relationship of parts lying in the vicinity of the common carotid artery, at the point of its bifurcation into external and internal carotids.

    - Joseph Maclise, Surgical Anatomy (1857) [full text]

     
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    Anatomy…is the foundation of the curative art, cultivated as a science in all its branchings; and comparison is the nurse of reason, which we are fain to make our guide in bringing the practical to bear productively.
- Joseph Maclise, Surgical Anatomy (1857) [full text]

    Anatomy…is the foundation of the curative art, cultivated as a science in all its branchings; and comparison is the nurse of reason, which we are fain to make our guide in bringing the practical to bear productively.

    - Joseph Maclise, Surgical Anatomy (1857) [full text]

     
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    A portion of each of those superficial layers, which it was necessary to divide, in order to expose a deeper organ, has been left holding its natural level. Thus the order of superposition taken by the integument, the fasciae, the muscles, bones, veins, nerves, and arteries, which occupy both the surgical triangles of the neck, will be readily recognised in the opposite Plates.
- Joseph Maclise, Surgical Anatomy (1857) [full text]

    A portion of each of those superficial layers, which it was necessary to divide, in order to expose a deeper organ, has been left holding its natural level. Thus the order of superposition taken by the integument, the fasciae, the muscles, bones, veins, nerves, and arteries, which occupy both the surgical triangles of the neck, will be readily recognised in the opposite Plates.

    - Joseph Maclise, Surgical Anatomy (1857) [full text]