LEA & BLANCHARD'S PUBLICATIONS— (Surgery.) 





PART SECOND — NOW READY. 



S U R G I C A L ~A N A T O M Y. 



BY JOSEPH MACLISE, Surgeon. 



To be complete in Four Parts, large imperial quarto, containing from Twelve to Sixteen 

 Colored Plates. Price $2 00 each. 



Forming one large Imperial Quarto Volume, containing from Fifty to Sixty large 

 Plates, many of the size of Life. 



Drawn in the best style, and beautifully colored. 



TOGETHER WITH ABOUT 150 PAGES OF LETTERPRESS. 



KjT PART III. is rapidly passing through the press, and will be issued at an early day. 



PLATES IN PART I. 



Plates 1 and 2. — Form of the Thoracic Cavity and Position of the Lungs, Heart, and larger Blood- 

 vessels. 

 Plates 3 and 4. — Surgical Form of the Superficial Cervical and Facial Regions, and the Relative 



Positions of the principal Blood-vessels, Nerves, &c. 

 Plates 5 and 6. — Surgical Form of the Deep Cervical and Facial Regions, and Relative Positions 



of the principal Blood-vessels, Nerves, &c. 

 Plates 7 and 8. — Surgical Dissection of the Subclavian and Carotid Regions, and Relative Anatomy 



of their Contents. 

 Plates 9 and 10. — Surgical Dissection of the Sterno-Clavicular or Tracheal Region, and Relative 



Position of its main Blood-vessels, Nerves, &c. 

 Plates 11 and 12. — Surgical Dissection of the Axillary and Brachial Regions, displaying the relative 



order of their contained parts. 

 Plates 13 and 14. — Surgical Form of the Male and Female Axillae compared/ 

 Plates 15 and 16. — Surgical Dissection of the Bend of the Elbow and the Forearm, showing the 



Relative Position of the Arteries, Veins, Nerves, &c. 



PLATES IN PAPvT II. 



Plates 17, 18 and 19. — Surgical Dissections of the Wrist and Hand. 



Plates 20 and 21. — Relative Position of the Cranial, Nasal, Oral, and Pharyngeal Cavities, &c. 



Plate 22. — Relative Position of the Superficial Organs of the Thorax and Abdomen. 



Plate 23. — Relative Position of the Deeper Organs of the Thorax and those of the Abdomen. 



Plate 24. — Relations of the Principal Blood-vessels to the Viscera of the Thoracic Abdominal 



Cavity. 

 Plate 25. — Relations of the Principal Blood-vessels of the Thorax and Abdomen to the Osseous 



Skeleton, &c. 

 Plate 26. — Relation of the Internal Partsto the External Surface of the Body. 



Plate 27. — Surgical Dissection of the Principal Blood-vessels, &c, of the Inguino-Femoral Region. 

 Plates 28 and 29. — Surgical Dissection of the First, Second, Third, and Fourth Layers of the 



Inguinal Region, in connection with those of the Thigh. 

 From this brief summary of the plates in the two numbers now ready, some estimate can be 

 formed of the plan of the work, and of the manner in which its execution has been attempted. No 

 complete work of the kind has as yet been published in the English Language, and it therefore will 

 supply a want long felt in this country of an accurate and comprehensive Surgical Anatomy, to 

 which the student and practitioner can at all times refer, to refresh the memory when called on to 

 perform operations, in the absence of material for dissection. Notwithstanding the large size, 

 beauty, and finish of the illustrations, it is put at a price so low as to place it within the reach of 

 all, in expectation of a very extended circulation. During the short period which has elapsed since 

 the publication of the first number, it has met with the unanimous approbation of the profession, 

 and from among a large number of commendatory notices, the publishers beg to submit a few. 



From Professor R L. Howard, Columbus, Ohio. 

 In all respects, the first number is the beginning of a most excellent work, filling completely what might 

 be considered hitherto a vacuum in surgical literature. For myself, in behalf of the medical profession, I 

 wish to express to you my thanks for this truly elegant and meritorious work. I am confident that it will 

 meet with a ready and extensive sale. I have spoken of it in the highest terms to my class and my profes- 

 sional brethren. 



From Professor E. R. Peaslee, Brunswick, Me. 

 I am very much pleased with the first part of i\laclise 1 s Surgical Anatomy, and should the other numbers 

 equal it, it will prove the best work on the subject, considering the price, and all things else, which has yet 

 been published in the English Language. 



From Prof. C. B. Gibson, Richmond, Va. 

 I consider Maclise very far superior, as to the drawings, to any work on Surgical Anatomy with which I 

 am familiar, and I am particularly struck with the exceedingly low price at which it is sold. I cannot doubt 

 that it will be extensively purchased by the profession. 



From Prof Granville S Pattison, New York. 

 The profession, in my opinion, owe you many thanks for the publication of this beautiful work— a work 

 which, in the correctness of its exhibition? of Surgical Anatomy, is not surpassed by any work with which 

 I am acquainted; and the admirable manner in which the lithographic plaies have been executed and 

 colored, is alike honorable to your house and to the arts in the United States. 

 From Prof. J. F May. Washington, D. C. 

 Having examined the work, I am pleased to add my testimony to its correctness, and to its value as a 

 work of reference by the surgeon. 



