A manual for the College of Surgeons in London, Dublin, and Edinburgh: intended for the use of candidates for examinations and practitioners / [John Steggall].
- Steggall, John, 1795?-1871.
- Date:
- 1839
Licence: Public Domain Mark
Credit: A manual for the College of Surgeons in London, Dublin, and Edinburgh: intended for the use of candidates for examinations and practitioners / [John Steggall]. Source: Wellcome Collection.
175/788 page 165
![the first phalanx of the little toe. Use. Their names express their uses. SUPERIORES, ve/ INTEROSSEI EX- TERNI, are bicipital muscles. Ist. Or. Internal side of the second metatarsal bone and outer side of the first. Ins. Inner side of the base of the first phalanx of the second toe. Use. To approximate the se- cond to the great toe. 2d. Or. Opposite sides of the second and third metatarsal bones. phalanx of the second toe. Use. To separate the second from the great toe. 3d. Opposite sides of the third and fourth metatarsal bones. Ins. Outer side of the first phalanx of the middle toe. Use. To remove the third from the two inner toes. 4th. Opposite sides of the fourth and fifth metatarsal bones. Ins. Outer side of the first phalanx of the fourth toe. Use. To separate the fourth from the three inner toes. Ist. LEVATOR PALPEBRE SUPE- Rioris. Or, Upper edge of the foramen opticum. Ins. Superior border of the tarsal cartilage. 2d. OBLiguus suPERIOR. Or. Margin of foramen opticum. Ins. Sclerotic coat between the superior and external rectus.. Use. To rotate the eye down- wards and inwards, towards the nose. 3d. OsBLiguus INFERIOR. Or. Orbital edge of the superior max- illary bone. Ins. Sclerotic coat between it and the external rectus muscle, behind the transverse axis of the eye. Use. To rotate the globe of the eye, upwards and outwards. 4th. RecTus SUPERIOR, vel AT~ TOLLENS OCULI. oth. ReEcTUS INFERIOR, vel DE- PRESSOR OCULI, 6th. Recrus InTERNUS, vel AD- DUCTOR OCULI. ith. RecTus EXTERNUS, vel AB- DUCTOR OCULI. [All arise round the optic fora- men, the external rectus being also attached to the margin of the sphenoidal fissure, and they are inserted about a quarter of an inch behind the cornea, and their names express their use. ]](https://iiif.wellcomecollection.org/image/b29302535_0175.jp2/full/800%2C/0/default.jpg)


