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LITHOTOMY

  • Lithotomy
  • Surgical method for removal of calculi stones

    Lithotomy from Greek for "lithos" (stone) and "tomos" (cut), is a surgical method for removal of calculi, stones formed inside certain organs, such as

    Lithotomy

    Lithotomy

    Lithotomy

  • Lithotomy position
  • Position for medical examinations and procedures

    The lithotomy position is a common position for surgical procedures and medical examinations involving the pelvis and lower abdomen, as well as a common

    Lithotomy position

    Lithotomy position

    Lithotomy_position

  • Childbirth positions
  • Physical posture the pregnant mother may assume during childbirth

    referred to as delivery positions or labor positions. In addition to the lithotomy position (on back with feet pulled up), still commonly used by many obstetricians

    Childbirth positions

    Childbirth_positions

  • Dilator (medical instrument)
  • Surgical instrument or medical implement used to expand an opening or passage

    A 16th-century lithotomy dilator, used to expand the urethra for extraction of urinary stones

    Dilator (medical instrument)

    Dilator (medical instrument)

    Dilator_(medical_instrument)

  • Medical procedure
  • Action to achieve a result in the delivery of healthcare

    surgery Knee cartilage replacement therapy Laminectomy Laparoscopic surgery Lithotomy Lithotriptor Lobotomy Neovaginoplasty Radiosurgery Stereotactic surgery

    Medical procedure

    Medical_procedure

  • Jan de Doot
  • Kidney stone patient who performed a lithotomy on himself

    17th-century Dutch blacksmith is said to have performed a successful lithotomy on himself in 1651. The painting is part of the Portrait Collection of

    Jan de Doot

    Jan de Doot

    Jan_de_Doot

  • List of human positions
  • Physical configurations of the human body

    The positioning may be voluntary or involuntary. In addition to the lithotomy position still commonly used by many obstetricians, childbirth positions

    List of human positions

    List of human positions

    List_of_human_positions

  • Lloyd-Davies position
  • Medical term

    neuropathological side effects compared with other positions, notably lithotomy position where the hips are almost fully flexed. Uncommonly it can precipitate

    Lloyd-Davies position

    Lloyd-Davies position

    Lloyd-Davies_position

  • Joseph Souberbielle
  • French surgeon

    1793 he was a juror of the Revolutionary Tribunal. Known for his work in lithotomy, especially using the suprapubic method. It is believed that he performed

    Joseph Souberbielle

    Joseph Souberbielle

    Joseph_Souberbielle

  • Stirrup (disambiguation)
  • Topics referred to by the same term

    stirrups, a type of socks worn by baseball players the braces supporting the lithotomy position utilised in medical examinations such as a pelvic exam A clamp

    Stirrup (disambiguation)

    Stirrup_(disambiguation)

  • Surgery in ancient Rome
  • ligatures, amputations, tonsillectomies, mastectomies, cataract surgeries, lithotomies, hernia repair, gynecology, neurosurgery, and others. Surgery was a rare

    Surgery in ancient Rome

    Surgery in ancient Rome

    Surgery_in_ancient_Rome

  • Michaab
  • Early medical device for crushing stones in the bladder

    to crush stones inside the bladder without having to open the abdomen (lithotomy). To remove a calculus the instrument was inserted through the urethra

    Michaab

    Michaab

    Michaab

  • William Cheselden
  • English surgeon (1688–1752)

    death at age 30. Cheselden is famous for the invention of the lateral lithotomy approach to removing bladder stones, which he first performed in 1727

    William Cheselden

    William Cheselden

    William_Cheselden

  • Ayurveda
  • Pseudoscientific alternative medicine originating from India

    ayurveda texts also taught surgical techniques, including rhinoplasty, lithotomy, sutures, cataract surgery, and the extraction of foreign objects. Historical

    Ayurveda

    Ayurveda

    Ayurveda

  • Calculus (medicine)
  • Solid mineral mass which forms in a bodily organ or duct

    in pickles, salad dressings, sauces, soups, shrubs cocktail) Surgery (lithotomy) Medication / antibiotics Extracorporeal shock wave lithotripsy (ESWL)

    Calculus (medicine)

    Calculus (medicine)

    Calculus_(medicine)

  • Jean Civiale
  • French urologist (1792–1867)

    to crush stones inside the bladder without having to open the abdomen (lithotomy). To remove a calculus, Civiale inserted his instrument through the urethra

    Jean Civiale

    Jean Civiale

    Jean_Civiale

  • Bladder stone
  • Concretion of material in the urinary bladder

    to Ammonius Lithotomos (stone-cutter) of Alexandria, Egypt. The term "lithotomy" is derived from the same words (λιθοτομία (lithotomia) - stone-cutting)

    Bladder stone

    Bladder stone

    Bladder_stone

  • Jacques Lisfranc de Saint Martin
  • French surgeon and gynecologist (1787–1847)

    He pioneered a number of operations including removal of the rectum, lithotomy in women, and amputation of the cervix uteri. He studied medicine in Lyon

    Jacques Lisfranc de Saint Martin

    Jacques Lisfranc de Saint Martin

    Jacques_Lisfranc_de_Saint_Martin

  • Hippocratic Oath
  • Oath of ethics taken by physicians

    is its ban on the use of the knife, even for small procedures such as lithotomy, even though other works in the Corpus provide guidance on performing

    Hippocratic Oath

    Hippocratic_Oath

  • Speculum (medicine)
  • Medical device for investigating body orifices by direct vision

    is placed in the vagina during vaginal surgery with the patient in the lithotomy position. The weight holds the speculum in place and frees the surgeon's

    Speculum (medicine)

    Speculum (medicine)

    Speculum_(medicine)

  • Janet Balaskas
  • South African writer

    to move during labour, rather than being placed into stirrups or the lithotomy position. She coined the term active birth which she explained in the

    Janet Balaskas

    Janet_Balaskas

  • James Earle
  • British surgeon

    (1755–1817) was a celebrated British surgeon, renowned for his skill in lithotomy. Earle was born in London. After studying medicine at St Bartholomew's

    James Earle

    James Earle

    James_Earle

  • Charles Aston Key
  • English surgeon (1793–1849)

    surgeoncy in January 1824. In this year he introduced the operation for lithotomy with the straight staff, using only a single knife; the success of his

    Charles Aston Key

    Charles Aston Key

    Charles_Aston_Key

  • Claude-Nicolas Le Cat
  • French surgeon

    Vaucanson to begin work on his first automaton. In 1732, he performed lateral lithotomy approach to removing bladder stones using the technique invented by Frère

    Claude-Nicolas Le Cat

    Claude-Nicolas Le Cat

    Claude-Nicolas_Le_Cat

  • Fowler's position
  • Standard patient position in medicine

    insertion, for dependent drainage after abdominal surgery, grooming, etc. Lithotomy position Trendelenburg position LaFleur Brooks, Myrna and Danielle (2018)

    Fowler's position

    Fowler's position

    Fowler's_position

  • Johannes Jacobus Rau
  • Dutch physician

    September 1719) was a Dutch surgeon and anatomist who made advances in lithotomy or the treatment of urinary stones. Rau was born in Baden-Baden, to wine

    Johannes Jacobus Rau

    Johannes Jacobus Rau

    Johannes_Jacobus_Rau

  • List of Greek and Latin roots in English/H–O
  • lithography, lithology, lithophile, lithophone, lithophyte, lithosphere, lithotomy, megalith, Mesolithic, microlite, monolith, monolithic, Neolithic, Paleolithic

    List of Greek and Latin roots in English/H–O

    List_of_Greek_and_Latin_roots_in_English/H–O

  • Anal fistula
  • Disease of the anus

    patient is given a spinal or general anaesthetic and is placed in the lithotomy position (legs in stirrups with the perineum at the edge of the table)

    Anal fistula

    Anal fistula

    Anal_fistula

  • Auguste Nélaton
  • French physician and surgeon

    (catheterization with stiff implements). He is also associated with improvements in lithotomy. Nélaton died in Paris and is buried in Père Lachaise Cemetery. Auguste

    Auguste Nélaton

    Auguste Nélaton

    Auguste_Nélaton

  • De Medicina
  • Medical treatise by Aulus Cornelius Celsus

    skin lesions and diseases. Book VII – Classical operations, such as lithotomy and removal of cataracts. Book VIII – Treatment of dislocations and fractures

    De Medicina

    De Medicina

    De_Medicina

  • Abraham Groves
  • Canadian physician and surgeon (1847–1935)

    1883. He is also recognized for performing Canada's first suprapubic lithotomy and for his early use of aseptic technique in surgery, possibly being

    Abraham Groves

    Abraham Groves

    Abraham_Groves

  • Al-Zahrawi
  • Berber Andalusian physician, surgeon and chemist (936–1013)

    surgical incision. His technique was important for the development of lithotomy, and an improvement over the existing techniques in Europe which caused

    Al-Zahrawi

    Al-Zahrawi

  • Kidney stone disease
  • Formation of mineral deposits in the kidneys

    lithotomies, or the surgical removal of stones. The Roman medical treatise De Medicina by Aulus Cornelius Celsus contained a description of lithotomy

    Kidney stone disease

    Kidney stone disease

    Kidney_stone_disease

  • History of science
  • surgery, including rhinoplasty, the repair of torn ear lobes, perineal lithotomy, cataract surgery, and several other excisions and other surgical procedures

    History of science

    History_of_science

  • Georg Bartisch
  • German physician (1535–1607)

    depicting diseases of the eye. Bartisch is also remembered for his work in lithotomy for the removal of urinary calculi. Despite his skill as a surgeon, Bartisch

    Georg Bartisch

    Georg Bartisch

    Georg_Bartisch

  • Ammonius Lithotomos
  • arose the term lithotomy, now having the arbitrary signification of cutting for the stone. Celsus gave the first description of lithotomy as performed before

    Ammonius Lithotomos

    Ammonius_Lithotomos

  • Colposcopy
  • Medical examination of the cervix

    buttocks at the lower edge of the table (a position known as the dorsal lithotomy position). A speculum is placed in the vagina after the vulva is examined

    Colposcopy

    Colposcopy

    Colposcopy

  • History of medicine
  • surgery, including rhinoplasty, the repair of torn ear lobes, perineal lithotomy, cataract surgery, and other excisions and surgical procedures. Susruta

    History of medicine

    History of medicine

    History_of_medicine

  • Matthew Dobson
  • English physician and physiologist (1732–1784)

    McGill-Queen's Press - MQUP. p. 34. ISBN 978-0-7735-7247-8. Retrieved 19 June 2013. A. Batty Shaw, The Norwich School of Lithotomy (PDF) at pp. 236–237.

    Matthew Dobson

    Matthew_Dobson

  • Double dye test
  • Test for diagnosing fistula

    volumes, but not at capacity. Direct inspection of leaking dye in vagina in lithotomy position is better than the traditional 'three swab test' as multiple

    Double dye test

    Double_dye_test

  • Vacuum extraction
  • Method to assist the delivery of a baby

    elective caesarean section may be performed. The woman is placed in the lithotomy position and assists throughout the process by pushing. A suction cup

    Vacuum extraction

    Vacuum extraction

    Vacuum_extraction

  • Mendelson's syndrome
  • Chemical pneumonitis or aspiration pneumonitis caused by aspiration during anaesthesia

    medication Neurological disease, impaired conscious level, or sedation Lithotomy position Difficult intubation/airway Gastrointestinal reflux Hiatal hernia

    Mendelson's syndrome

    Mendelson's_syndrome

  • Vaginal wet mount
  • Gynecologic test

    2 to 3 days before the test. The sampling is done with the patient in lithotomy position. A speculum is used to facilitate use of a swab or spatula to

    Vaginal wet mount

    Vaginal wet mount

    Vaginal_wet_mount

  • Transvaginal oocyte retrieval
  • Technique used in in vitro fertilization

    in an operating room or a physician's office, with the subject in the lithotomy position. TVOR is usually performed under procedural sedation, general

    Transvaginal oocyte retrieval

    Transvaginal_oocyte_retrieval

  • History of surgery
  • carry out invasive body procedures with dubious consequences, such as lithotomy. Works from the Hippocratic corpus include; On the Articulations or On

    History of surgery

    History of surgery

    History_of_surgery

  • Natural childbirth
  • Childbirth without routine medical interventions, particularly anesthesia

    squatting, hands and knees, or suspension in water—contrast with the supine lithotomy position (woman in hospital bed on her back with legs in stirrups). Supine

    Natural childbirth

    Natural_childbirth

  • Rudolph Menger
  • in the local natural history. He was the first to perform a suprapubic lithotomy in the US in 1886. He published his natural history observations in 1913

    Rudolph Menger

    Rudolph Menger

    Rudolph_Menger

  • Surgical positions
  • Placement of a patient in particular physical position during surgery

    cause the first rib to put pressure on the nerves in the shoulder. The lithotomy position is also known to cause stress on the lower extremities. A surgical

    Surgical positions

    Surgical_positions

  • Francis Conyngham, 2nd Marquess Conyngham
  • Anglo-Irish soldier, courtier, politician and absentee landlord

    months and died in London in July 1876, aged 79, after an operation for lithotomy. He was succeeded in the marquessate by his eldest son, George. Cokayne

    Francis Conyngham, 2nd Marquess Conyngham

    Francis Conyngham, 2nd Marquess Conyngham

    Francis_Conyngham,_2nd_Marquess_Conyngham

  • Marin Marais
  • French composer and viol player (1656–1728)

    Wagestraet. Retrieved 8 August 2017 – via The Open Library. François Tolet, "Lithotomy, or a treatise of the extraction of the stone out of the bladder . .

    Marin Marais

    Marin Marais

    Marin_Marais

  • 1:00 P.M. (The Pitt season 2)
  • 7th episode of the 2nd season of The Pitt

    prepares the gynaecological swab for Ilana, having the latter lie down in a lithotomy position. This triggers Ilana to refuse continuing exams for the rape

    1:00 P.M. (The Pitt season 2)

    1:00_P.M._(The_Pitt_season_2)

  • Antonio Fernandez Carvajal
  • Portuguese-Jewish merchant

    haaretz.com https://barberscompany.org/on-this-day-26-march-samuel-pepys-lithotomy/ Carvajal & Pepys ferdinando.org.uk Epitaph given by D. Kaufmann, in Jew

    Antonio Fernandez Carvajal

    Antonio_Fernandez_Carvajal

  • Obstructed defecation
  • Inability to fully empty the rectum during bowel movements

    malignant tumor. This is usually carried out with the individual in the lithotomy position or left lateral position (lying on their left side). During this

    Obstructed defecation

    Obstructed_defecation

  • Claude Pouteau
  • French surgeon and inventor (1724–1775)

    Lyon. Pouteau was a very human doctor. For example, he put an end to the lithotomy operations performed in a row (the spectators saw several operations,

    Claude Pouteau

    Claude_Pouteau

  • Ina May Gaskin
  • American midwife

    Since this maneuver requires a significant movement from the standard lithotomy position, it can be substantially more difficult to perform while under

    Ina May Gaskin

    Ina May Gaskin

    Ina_May_Gaskin

  • Thomas Bond (American physician)
  • American physician

    Boston) to avail themselves of his surgical care. He performed the first lithotomy in the United States at Pennsylvania Hospital in October 1756 and developed

    Thomas Bond (American physician)

    Thomas Bond (American physician)

    Thomas_Bond_(American_physician)

  • Jean Zuléma Amussat
  • French surgeon (1796–1856)

    urethral sounds. Lithotritie et lithotomie. 1827 – On lithotripsy and lithotomy. Torsion des artères; Archives générales de médecine, Paris, 1829, 20:

    Jean Zuléma Amussat

    Jean Zuléma Amussat

    Jean_Zuléma_Amussat

  • List of -otomies
  • All surgical procedures in which something is cut or separated

    through the abdominal wall to gain access into the abdominal cavity. Lithotomy position – Medical term referring to a common position for surgical procedures

    List of -otomies

    List_of_-otomies

  • Hugh Owen Thomas
  • Welsh orthopaedic surgeon

    deformities of the bones of the trunk and upper extremities (1887) A new lithotomy operation (1888) An argument with the censor at St. Luke's Hospital, New

    Hugh Owen Thomas

    Hugh Owen Thomas

    Hugh_Owen_Thomas

  • Thomas Blizard
  • English surgeon (1772–1838)

    his knowledge of anatomy and for his invention of a special knife for lithotomy. He died 7 May 1838. He was the author of a 'Description of an Extra-Uterine

    Thomas Blizard

    Thomas_Blizard

  • Pelvic Organ Prolapse Quantification System
  • System of standardizing research reporting on pelvic organ prolapse

    when the Valsalva maneuver is performed while The woman is in the dorsal lithotomy position. The anatomical landmarks used are anterior vaginal wall, cervix

    Pelvic Organ Prolapse Quantification System

    Pelvic_Organ_Prolapse_Quantification_System

  • Robert Conny
  • have been a successful physician, and to have improved the practice of lithotomy. He died on 25 May 1713, at the age of 68, and was buried in Rochester

    Robert Conny

    Robert Conny

    Robert_Conny

  • Martineau family
  • English family of Huguenot background

    Apprenticed to the surgeon William Donne, who was noted for skill in lithotomy, he studied medicine at several universities. After Edinburgh University

    Martineau family

    Martineau family

    Martineau_family

  • John Thomson (physician)
  • Scottish surgeon and physician

    1799, vol. iii. 1800; the work reached a fifth edition. Observations on Lithotomy, with a new Manner of Cutting for Stone, Edinburgh, 1808. An appendix

    John Thomson (physician)

    John Thomson (physician)

    John_Thomson_(physician)

  • Benjamin Winslow Dudley
  • American surgeon and educator (1785–1870)

    University of Pennsylvania, in London, and in Paris, he performed hundreds of lithotomy, trephinations and treated aneurysms. In his lectures and writing, he

    Benjamin Winslow Dudley

    Benjamin Winslow Dudley

    Benjamin_Winslow_Dudley

  • Granville Sharp Pattison
  • British anatomist (1791–1851)

    children. He was author of Experimental Observations on the Operation of Lithotomy, Philadelphia, 1820; and of controversial works[clarification needed]

    Granville Sharp Pattison

    Granville Sharp Pattison

    Granville_Sharp_Pattison

  • Hysteroscopy
  • Medical procedure

    (MAC). Prophylactic antibiotics are not necessary. The patient is in a lithotomy position during the procedure. The diameter of the modern hysteroscope

    Hysteroscopy

    Hysteroscopy

    Hysteroscopy

  • Samuel Sharp (surgeon)
  • English surgeon and author

    written book in good English contains 13 short chapters upon hernia, lithotomy, amputations, concussion of the brain, tumours of the gall-bladder, extirpation

    Samuel Sharp (surgeon)

    Samuel Sharp (surgeon)

    Samuel_Sharp_(surgeon)

  • Giovanni Trulli
  • surgery. Trulli's education was in France and gained a reputation for lithotomy. He went to Rome where offered free surgery to the poor and the rent for

    Giovanni Trulli

    Giovanni_Trulli

  • Childbirth in Japan
  • semi-sitting position, though some literature suggest the lying down, lithotomy position, is still used. Painkillers are thought to complicate deliveries

    Childbirth in Japan

    Childbirth_in_Japan

  • Timeline of medicine and medical technology
  • Ayurvedic medicine, giving many surgical procedures for first time such as lithotomy, forehead flap rhinoplasty, otoplasty and many more. c. 490 – c. 430 –

    Timeline of medicine and medical technology

    Timeline_of_medicine_and_medical_technology

  • James H. Aveling
  • British obstetrician (1828–1892)

    cremated at Woking Crematorium. Source: Books and monographs On Vaginal Lithotomy (J.E. Adlard; 1864), booklet reprinted from Transactions of the Obstetrical

    James H. Aveling

    James H. Aveling

    James_H._Aveling

  • Ephraim McDowell
  • American physician (1771–1830)

    practice as a surgeon. McDowell perfected the modern surgical technique of lithotomy, for removal of stones obstructing the urinary bladder. One of his most

    Ephraim McDowell

    Ephraim McDowell

    Ephraim_McDowell

  • Vaginal introital laxity
  • Medical condition

    legs to be comfortably positioned. This position is called the dorsal lithotomy position, which is most commonly used in genital examination. In some

    Vaginal introital laxity

    Vaginal_introital_laxity

  • Sir Henry Thompson, 1st Baronet
  • British surgeon and polymath (1820–1904)

    dealing with them, including: Practical Lithotomy and Lithotrity, Tumours of the Bladder, Suprapubic Lithotomy, and Preventive Treatment of Calculus Disease

    Sir Henry Thompson, 1st Baronet

    Sir Henry Thompson, 1st Baronet

    Sir_Henry_Thompson,_1st_Baronet

  • Lexington Cemetery
  • United States historic place

    in 1818. Pioneered surgical procedures, including removal of stones (lithotomy) and cranial surgery for epilepsy. Ethelbert Ludlow Dudley, Medical doctor

    Lexington Cemetery

    Lexington Cemetery

    Lexington_Cemetery

  • Sir James Wylie, 1st Baronet
  • Scottish imperial physician and reformer in Russia

    friend; the Danish ambassador. Wylie successfully performed a life-saving lithotomy using a trocar improvised from the catheter; afterwards finding himself

    Sir James Wylie, 1st Baronet

    Sir James Wylie, 1st Baronet

    Sir_James_Wylie,_1st_Baronet

  • Charles Bell
  • Scottish surgeon, anatomist, artist and theologian (1774–1842)

    Great Operations of Surgery: Trepan, Hernia, Amputation, Aneurism, and Lithotomy (1821). He wrote also the first treatise on notions of anatomy and physiology

    Charles Bell

    Charles Bell

    Charles_Bell

  • Jeremiah Whitaker Newman
  • English surgeon and medical writer;

    so far as it may be necessary to compare them with the Operation of Lithotomy,’ London, 1781, 8vo; and ‘An Essay on the Principles and Manners of the

    Jeremiah Whitaker Newman

    Jeremiah_Whitaker_Newman

  • List of people with kidney stones
  • stones during his youth. At the age of seventeen he underwent a successful lithotomy without anaesthetic for removal of a urinary stone. Thereafter he was

    List of people with kidney stones

    List of people with kidney stones

    List_of_people_with_kidney_stones

  • Earle (surname)
  • Surname list

    (1755–1817), eighteenth-century British surgeon, renowned for his skill in lithotomy John Earle (disambiguation), several people Joseph H. Earle (1847–1897)

    Earle (surname)

    Earle_(surname)

  • Joseph Thomas Clover
  • English doctor and pioneer of anaesthesia (1825–1882)

    1930s. Clover's crutch was a device for maintaining the patient in the lithotomy position. Clover's health was fragile throughout his life. He died of

    Joseph Thomas Clover

    Joseph Thomas Clover

    Joseph_Thomas_Clover

  • List of Greek and Latin roots in English/L
  • lithography, lithology, lithophile, lithophone, lithophyte, lithosphere, lithotomy, megalith, Mesolithic, microlite, monolith, monolithic, Neolithic, Paleolithic

    List of Greek and Latin roots in English/L

    List_of_Greek_and_Latin_roots_in_English/L

  • Museum Boerhaave
  • Science Museum in Leiden, Netherlands

    lithotomy scoops, a Phimosis knife, gorgerets, a catheter, a bistoury cache, a combined syringotome and seton needle, a wound retractor, lithotomy directors

    Museum Boerhaave

    Museum Boerhaave

    Museum_Boerhaave

  • Alexander B. Mott
  • American surgeon and soldier

    external iliac five times; resection of the femur three times; performing lithotomy twenty-one times; femoral eighteen times; and removal of the entire lower

    Alexander B. Mott

    Alexander B. Mott

    Alexander_B._Mott

  • Jean Méry
  • French surgeon and anatomist (1645–1722)

    demonstrate his method on a cadaver and afterwards allowed to conduct lithotomies on patients. Out of 71 patients 53% died from complications and Méry

    Jean Méry

    Jean Méry

    Jean_Méry

  • Inuit culture
  • Culture of the Inuit in the Arctic and Subarctic region

    soapstone and marble, and soon afterwards also of graphics (drawings, lithotomies, lithographs, erasures) and tapestry (for example hangings), yielded

    Inuit culture

    Inuit culture

    Inuit_culture

  • Robert Moore Peile
  • Irish physician, d. 1858

    inventor of a lithotome, which limited and rendered incisions more facile in lithotomy procedures. According to Charles Cameron, at one point in time in Ireland

    Robert Moore Peile

    Robert Moore Peile

    Robert_Moore_Peile

  • John Aitken (surgeon)
  • Scottish surgeon (died 1790)

    diminishing the stone in the bladder, when too large to remove entire by lithotomy." Aitken also devised a mobile saw used to divide the pubic symphysis

    John Aitken (surgeon)

    John_Aitken_(surgeon)

  • Edwin Lee (physician)
  • English medical writer (died 1870)

    dissertation upon the advantages of this method of operating as compared with lithotomy the College of Surgeons in 1838 awarded him the Jacksonian prize. In 1844

    Edwin Lee (physician)

    Edwin_Lee_(physician)

  • Joseph Hodgson
  • British physician (1788–1869)

    In 1849, having made a considerable fortune in Birmingham, chiefly by lithotomy, he returned to London. In 1851 he was made president of the Medical and

    Joseph Hodgson

    Joseph Hodgson

    Joseph_Hodgson

  • Valentine Mott
  • American surgeon

    have performed one thousand amputations and one hundred and sixty-five lithotomies. After spending seven years in Europe (1834-1841) Mott returned to New

    Valentine Mott

    Valentine Mott

    Valentine_Mott

  • Instruments used in obstetrics and gynecology
  • is placed in the vagina during vaginal surgery with the patient in the lithotomy position. The weight holds the speculum in place and frees the surgeon's

    Instruments used in obstetrics and gynecology

    Instruments used in obstetrics and gynecology

    Instruments_used_in_obstetrics_and_gynecology

  • William Coulson (surgeon)
  • English surgeon

    1865. On Lithotrity and Lithotomy, 1853. Lectures on Diseases of the Joints, 1854. Coulson also contributed the articles "Lithotomy" and "Lithotrity" to

    William Coulson (surgeon)

    William Coulson (surgeon)

    William_Coulson_(surgeon)

  • William Dalrymple (surgeon)
  • English surgeon (1772-1847)

    carotid artery. He attained great success as an operator, especially in lithotomy. He formed a valuable collection of anatomical and pathological preparations

    William Dalrymple (surgeon)

    William_Dalrymple_(surgeon)

  • John Glasgow Kerr
  • American missionary

    In Canton, Kerr performed around 48,918 surgeries; his specialty being lithotomy and lithotrity, the removal of gallstones from the urinary tract, bladder

    John Glasgow Kerr

    John Glasgow Kerr

    John_Glasgow_Kerr

  • Alexander Hodgdon Stevens
  • American surgeon

    Surgery, editor (1822) Clinical Lecture in Injuries (1837) Lectures on Lithotomy (1838) Address to Graduates (1847) Plea of Humanity in Behalf of Medical

    Alexander Hodgdon Stevens

    Alexander Hodgdon Stevens

    Alexander_Hodgdon_Stevens

  • Sir William Fergusson, 1st Baronet
  • Scottish surgeon (1808–1877)

    on the jaws, the excision of joints, notably the hip, knee, and elbow, lithotomy and lithotrity, and amputations of limbs. His skill in dissection, and

    Sir William Fergusson, 1st Baronet

    Sir William Fergusson, 1st Baronet

    Sir_William_Fergusson,_1st_Baronet

  • David Hartley (philosopher)
  • English philosopher (1705–1757)

    stand on his head to relieve himself.) Treatment by surgical removal (lithotomy) was a procedure many failed to survive. Hartley thought a herbalist called

    David Hartley (philosopher)

    David Hartley (philosopher)

    David_Hartley_(philosopher)

  • Alexander Irving, Lord Newton
  • Scottish judge and academic

    Alexander Irving, Lord Newton, after enduring the worst possible operation of lithotomy with the greatest possible courage last January, died about ten days ago

    Alexander Irving, Lord Newton

    Alexander Irving, Lord Newton

    Alexander_Irving,_Lord_Newton

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LITHOTOMY

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Online names & meanings

  • Urzula
  • Girl/Female

    German, Latin, Polish

    Urzula

    Bear; Little Female Bear

  • Eila
  • Girl/Female

    Assamese, Christian, Danish, Finnish, German, Gujarati, Hebrew, Hindu, Indian, Kannada, Malayalam, Marathi, Rajasthani, Swedish, Tamil, Telugu

    Eila

    The Earth

  • Max, Maxwell
  • Boy/Male

    Christian & English(British/American/Australian)

    Max, Maxwell

    Great

  • Blasa
  • Girl/Female

    German, Spanish

    Blasa

    Firebrand; Stutters; Stammerer

  • Garajan
  • Boy/Male

    Hindu, Indian

    Garajan

    Thunder

  • GWENDOLOENA
  • Female

    Arthurian

    GWENDOLOENA

    , white browed.

  • Aude
  • Girl/Female

    French

    Aude

    Old or wealthy.

  • DELPHINIOS
  • Male

    Greek

    DELPHINIOS

    (Δελφινιος) Greek name DELPHINIOS means "of Delphi" or "of the Dolphins." In mythology, this is a title belonging to Apollo.

  • Magpiash
  • Biblical

    Magpiash

    a body thrust hard together

  • Haaris
  • Boy/Male

    Muslim/Islamic

    Haaris

    Friend

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Other words and meanings similar to

LITHOTOMY

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LITHOTOMY

  • Operate
  • v. i.

    To perform some manual act upon a human body in a methodical manner, and usually with instruments, with a view to restore soundness or health, as in amputation, lithotomy, etc.

  • Lithotomy
  • n.

    The operation, art, or practice of cutting for stone in the bladder.

  • Gorget
  • n.

    A cutting instrument used in lithotomy.

  • Lithotomical
  • a.

    Pertaining to, or performed by, lithotomy.