On the origin and progress of renal surgery : with special reference to stone in the kidney and ureter and to the surgical treatment of calculous anuria being the Hunterian lectures for 1898 together with a critical examination of subparietal injuries of the ureter / by Henry Morris.
- Date:
- 1898
Licence: Public Domain Mark
Credit: On the origin and progress of renal surgery : with special reference to stone in the kidney and ureter and to the surgical treatment of calculous anuria being the Hunterian lectures for 1898 together with a critical examination of subparietal injuries of the ureter / by Henry Morris. Source: Wellcome Collection.
Provider: This material has been provided by the Royal College of Physicians of Edinburgh. The original may be consulted at the Royal College of Physicians of Edinburgh.
29/314 page 17
![toneum, and he closed the opening with interrupted sutures. His third case does not seem to have been operated upon. It was not, hoAvever, until the }^ear after Hahn’s first nephrorrhaphy that ureteral surgery fairly commenced. In 1882 Bardenheuer performed ureterotomy for calculous Fig. 3.—Small ureter with contractions of its lumen. A stone ]»lugs the infundibu- lum, and the kidney is completely disorganised. (xUithor’s case. Table III.. No. 15). anuria, removed four stones, one of which was impacted in the upper end of the ureter, and closed the ureteral incision by sutures. In Bardenheuer’s case the urine did not find its way subsequently into the bladder, so he divided the ureter and established a lumbar ureterostomy. In 1884 I published a paper advocating the extraction of calculi impacted in the intra-vesical portion of the ureter c](https://iiif.wellcomecollection.org/image/b21955475_0029.jp2/full/800%2C/0/default.jpg)


