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ARTICLE |

SOME PHASES OF INTRANASAL SURGERY.

G. V. WOOLEN, M.D.
JAMA. 1899;XXXIII(27):1642-1644. doi:10.1001/jama.1899.92450790006001c.
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ABSTRACT

The development of intranasal surgery is so modern and unique that it is not strange that many are not only unfamiliar with its details, but are likely to misjudge its character and necessities. This distrust is not altogether unmerited. Certain procedures have been suggested and used for a given condition, and through habit, or otherwise, their use has been extended to other conditions without any apparent reason. Enlarged turbinate bodies have been cauterized simply because they were enlarged. Septal spurs have been sawed away because they were spurs, polypi have been removed simply because they were polypi, etc. Such looseness of theory, if such it be, and the practice which has sprung from it, have deservedly led to this distrust. An army of incompetents has sprung up all over the country. Many with little or no preparation are operating indiscriminately.

Anatomic and physiologic as well as pathologic laws should govern

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