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ARTICLE |

PURGING BEFORE AND AFTER ABDOMINAL SECTION

HENRY T. BYFORD, M.D., F.R.C.S.
JAMA. 1919;72(7):474-475. doi:10.1001/jama.1919.02610070012005.
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ABSTRACT

A few years ago the drift of surgery, as a result of the introduction of anesthesia and the adoption of antisepsis, was toward the development of technic and the perfection of methods. Coincidentally much attention was given to the elaboration of the preparatory and after-treatment. Many things were recommended and more or less extensively employed for the purpose of fortifying the patient for the operative ordeal, and of neutralizing the untoward effects. As surgical technic improved and methods were perfected, one after another, these measures were found to be no longer necessary and were eliminated, and the preparatory and after-treatment assumed a simplified, more or less routine character.

One of the routine measures that has survived is the preoperative and postoperative purgation. Yet there are those who are now seeking to give this attempted imitation of a simple process of nature its coup de grâce. They not only declare it

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