The Dental Cosmos, Volume 60J. D. White, John Hugh McQuillen, George Jacob Ziegler, James William White, Edward Cameron Kirk, Lovick Pierce Anthony S. S. White Dental Manufacturing Company, 1918 |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 100
Page 7
... hand instru- ments . The cavity should now be ex- tended to include the sharp slopes toward the pit , without making its floor deeper . This broadening is done by undermining the enamel with an inverted cone bur 8/10 or 1 mm . in ...
... hand instru- ments . The cavity should now be ex- tended to include the sharp slopes toward the pit , without making its floor deeper . This broadening is done by undermining the enamel with an inverted cone bur 8/10 or 1 mm . in ...
Page 11
... hand instruments will be found less painful than the burs . The first strokes are usually the most painful , but if well and vigorously made , most of the decayed material in the central por- tion can be removed . This should be ...
... hand instruments will be found less painful than the burs . The first strokes are usually the most painful , but if well and vigorously made , most of the decayed material in the central por- tion can be removed . This should be ...
Page 30
... hand by modifiers which ap- proach in complexity the secret of life itself , split up the normal tissues of the mouth . It becomes necessary to investigate every chance means of elimination of an influence which , though at nearly all ...
... hand by modifiers which ap- proach in complexity the secret of life itself , split up the normal tissues of the mouth . It becomes necessary to investigate every chance means of elimination of an influence which , though at nearly all ...
Page 33
... hands were scrubbed with soap and brush in running hot water ; again finger - prints FIG . 5 . The following experiment may be of in- terest at this point . Just before washing the hands the finger - tips were placed in contact with ...
... hands were scrubbed with soap and brush in running hot water ; again finger - prints FIG . 5 . The following experiment may be of in- terest at this point . Just before washing the hands the finger - tips were placed in contact with ...
Page 34
... hands clean and keep them clean , by thorough scrubbing for each patient , then rinse the hands at frequent intervals ... hand- pieces should be boiled in a green soap solution occasionally . For purposes of sterilization we may separate ...
... hands clean and keep them clean , by thorough scrubbing for each patient , then rinse the hands at frequent intervals ... hand- pieces should be boiled in a green soap solution occasionally . For purposes of sterilization we may separate ...
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
1st Lieut abscess acid alveolar alveolar process amylase anesthesia annual meeting antiseptic apical apicoectomy application arch army blood Board of Dental Board of Examiners bone canal cause cavity cells cementum cent Chicago clinical Committee crown cusp cyst Dental Association Dental Corps DENTAL COSMOS dental officers dental profession Dental Society dental surgeon dentin dentist dentistry denture disease duty enamel epithelial filling fixature gingival glands gold granuloma gutta-percha held impression incisors infection iodin Jersey June lesions lingual lower malocclusion mastication membrane ment method molar mouth National Dental Navy Navy Dental Corps normal occlusion operation oral organisms orthodontia paper patient Pennsylvania Philadelphia plaster plate practice present President pulp pyorrhea pyorrhea alveolaris removed root root-canal saliva Sec'y sepsis septic socket solution splint sterile surface Surgery surgical talonid teeth thyroid tion tissue tooth treatment upper
Popular passages
Page 245 - I move that the Secretary be instructed to cast the ballot of the Association for the election of the members whose names were proposed by the Council yesterday.
Page 272 - Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives of the Vnited States of America in Congress assembled, That this Act may be cited as the Bank Holding Company Act of 1947.
Page 463 - It is the manifest duty of citizens with this special knowledge to use it at this time where it will be of most value to the government. Women especially are urged to undertake this office work. Those who have not the required training are encouraged to undergo instruction at once.
Page 188 - Board, which is to be a committee of the General Medical Board of the Council of National Defense. The State Committee of the Medical Section of the Council of National Defense constitutes the Governing Board in each State.
Page 257 - SURGERY AND DISEASES OF THE MOUTH AND JAWS. A Practical Treatise on the Surgery and Diseases of the Mouth and Allied Structures. By VILRAY PAPIN BLAIR, AM, MD, FACS, Professor of Oral Surgery in the Washington University Dental School, and Associate in Surgery in the Washington University Medical School.
Page 186 - ... such as are commissioned under this act. The appointees as acting dental surgeons must be citizens of the United States between twenty-one and twenty-seven years of age, graduates of a standard dental college, of good moral character and good professional education, and they shall be required to pass the usual physical examination required for appointment in the Medical Corps, and a professional examination which shall include tests of skill in practical dentistry and of proficiency in the usual...
Page 272 - An Act making appropriations for the naval service for the fiscal year ending June thirtieth, nineteen hundred and seventeen, and for other purposes...
Page 648 - States between twenty-four and thirty years of age, and shall be graduates of standard medical or dental colleges and trained in the several branches of dentistry, and...
Page 180 - Any licensed dentist, public institution or school authorities may employ such licensed and registered dental hygienists. Such dental hygienists may remove lime deposits, accretions...
Page 400 - The body is an organic whole and these so-called cryptorrhetic organs, organs of internal secretion, are not unique, but the bones, muscles, skin, brain and every part of the body are furnishing internal secretions necessary to the development and proper functioning of all the other organs of the body. Such a scheme, to be complete, must embrace every organ • only the barest beginning has been made in this study so important, so necessary for the understanding of development and inheritance. Problems...