FROM MR. EDWARD ARNOLD'S LIST 



A PRACTICAL HANDBOOK OF 

 SURGICAL AFTER-TREATMENT. 



By ALAN H. TODD, B.Sc., M.S. (Lond.)l F.R.C.S. (Eng.) ; 

 Surgical Registrar and Tutor, Guy's Hospital, xii + 256 pages. 

 Illustrated. Cloth. 45. 6d. net. 



Whether or not an operation is successful depends, not only upon the skill 

 of the surgeon and the method of carrying out the operation, but upon the 

 care which is subsequently bestowed upon the patient and the method of 

 after-treatment employed. 



Careful after-treatment will often bring through safely the most hopeless 

 case, whilst neglect or lack of care will render void the result of the most 

 skilful surgeon's efforts. 



The Author has written an essentially practical book, giving clear and 

 precise instructions for the after-treatment of every kind of surgical case. 

 The book will be of the greatest service to house-surgeons and dressers, and 

 also to sisters, nurses, and everyone who has anything to do with the after- 

 treatment of a modern surgical case. 



SURGICAL MATERIALS 

 AND THEIR USES. 



By ALEXANDER MACL/ENNAN, M.B., CM. (Glas.) ; Visiting 

 Surgeon, Glasgow Royal Hospital for Sick Children; Assistant 

 Surgeon, Western Infirmary, Glasgow ; etc., etc. viii-i- 252 pages. 

 With 277 Diagrams and Illustrations. Cloth. 45. 6d. net. 



" This book is divided into six sections which deal with bandaging, splints, dressings, anti- 

 septics and asepsis, sutures and ligatures, and instruments. It is the sort of manual which should 

 be in the hands of every student who is beginning surgical hospital work, and we can recommend 

 it as a vade-mecum to all such. It is well and clearly written, copiously illustrated, and 

 deserves as we have no doubt it will obtain a large circulation." Liverpool Medico- 

 Chirurgical Journal. 



MODERN ANESTHETICS. 



By J. FREDERICK W. SILK, M.D. (Lond.); Senior Anaesthetist 

 and Lecturer on Anaesthetics, King's College Hospital, etc., etc. 

 xii + 200 pages. Illustrated. Cloth. 35. 6d. net. 



The object of the author has been to describe in detail those procedures 

 which he has found most useful in practice. These descriptions are preceded 

 by a short account of the phenomena of anaesthesia, and are followed by a 

 rather fuller reference to the difficulties met with, and their treatment, both 

 in simple and exceptional operations. 



