The ligature preferable to agaric, in securing the blood-vessels after amputations [electronic resource] : In which the dangerous and fatal consequences that may attend a dependence upon the latter, are offered to the consideration of surgeons; and the experiments made at Paris by Monsieur Faget, and at London by Mr. Warner, proved to be insufficient to authorize such a practice. By Henry Parker of Sandwich, sometime surgeon of the Royal Navy.
The ligature preferable to agaric, in securing the blood-vessels after amputations [electronic resource] : In which the dangerous and fatal consequences that may attend a dependence upon the latter, are offered to the consideration of surgeons; and the experiments made at Paris by Monsieur Faget, and at London by Mr. Warner, proved to be insufficient to authorize such a practice. By Henry Parker of Sandwich, sometime surgeon of the Royal Navy.
London : Printed for R. Griffiths, at the Dunciad, in Pater-noster-Row; W. Owen, in Fleet-street; and J. Silyer, bookseller, in Sandwich, MDCCLV. [1755]
Place of Publication or Printing
Great Britain -- England -- London.
Language
English
Description
iv,18,[2]p. ; 8⁰.
Note
With a final advertisement leaf. Reproduction of original from Library of Congress.
Access Note
Access limited to authorized users.
Indexed In
English Short Title Catalog, T153495.
Reproduction
Electronic reproduction. Farmington Hills, Mich. : Cengage Gale, 2009. Available via the World Wide Web. Access limited by licensing agreements.