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ARTICLE |

Surgery of the Upper Abdomen. In Two Volumes.

JAMA. 1909;LIII(11):889. doi:10.1001/jama.1909.02550110063021.
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ABSTRACT

The first 30 pages of this volume are devoted to the topographic anatomy of the stomach and duodenum. The latest views concerning the relations of the viscera in question are given, but we regret that more attention has not been given to a discussion of the duodenojejunal angle. Almost twenty years ago Jonnesco described the anatomy of this angle accurately. Surgeons seem to have overlooked this work almost entirely, and are just beginning to realize that the beginning of the jejunum in about 20 per cent, of the cases passes downward and to the right, while in the remaining 80 per cent, it passes downward and to the left. These two forms are associated with definite fossæ, indicating that the direction of the jejunum in the two cases is anatomic. Jonnesco's work should be reviewed, as it has apparently been forgotten by surgeons. Twenty-five pages are devoted to physiology, in

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