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. Deformities of the mouth : congenital and acquired, with their mechanical treatment. Fig. 45. Fig. 46. 1865.—Mr. Eobert Ramsay, in a paper on the Treatment of Congenital Cleft Palate, broughtan instrument before the above-mentioned Society,made on Dr. Kingsleys principle, but muchsimplified in construction. 1867.—Mr. George Parkinson, in a communi-cation to the Lancet, made the following remarkson his method of treating cleft of the hard andsoft palate. (I have reproduced the drawings by which hisarticle was illustrated, in order to render it themore interesting.) In a case of congenital fis

. Deformities of the mouth : congenital and acquired, with their mechanical treatment. Fig. 45. Fig. 46. 1865.—Mr. Eobert Ramsay, in a paper on the Treatment of Congenital Cleft Palate, broughtan instrument before the above-mentioned Society,made on Dr. Kingsleys principle, but muchsimplified in construction. 1867.—Mr. George Parkinson, in a communi-cation to the Lancet, made the following remarkson his method of treating cleft of the hard andsoft palate. (I have reproduced the drawings by which hisarticle was illustrated, in order to render it themore interesting.) In a case of congenital fis Stock Photo
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Reading Room 2020 / Alamy Stock Photo

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2CECTNT

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1210 x 2065 px | 20.5 x 35 cm | 8.1 x 13.8 inches | 150dpi

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. Deformities of the mouth : congenital and acquired, with their mechanical treatment. Fig. 45. Fig. 46. 1865.—Mr. Eobert Ramsay, in a paper on the Treatment of Congenital Cleft Palate, broughtan instrument before the above-mentioned Society, made on Dr. Kingsleys principle, but muchsimplified in construction. 1867.—Mr. George Parkinson, in a communi-cation to the Lancet, made the following remarkson his method of treating cleft of the hard andsoft palate. (I have reproduced the drawings by which hisarticle was illustrated, in order to render it themore interesting.) In a case of congenital fissure of the palateextending through the hard tissues and alveolarridge, after having taken a correct model of the 135 parts in wax or plaster of Paris, I commence by-fitting a thin plate of gold over the vault of thepalate, as far back as the posterior margin of thepalate bone would have extended had the bony