Polaillon speaks of a doubleovariotomy on a woman pregnant at three months, with the subsequent birth of a living child at term.
Rein performed ovariotomy on a girl of six, suffering from a multilocular cyst of the left ovary.
Pregnancy going to term with a successful delivery frequently follows the performance of ovariotomy with astonishing rapidity.
Crouch reports a case of successful parturition in a patient who had previously undergone ovariotomy by a large incision.
In the second month of pregnancy he also rotated an ovarian tumor causing acute symptoms and afterward performed ovariotomy without interfering with pregnancy.
Parsons mentions a case of twin pregnancy two years after ovariotomy attended with abnormal development of one of the children.
Olier cites an instance of ovariotomy with a pregnancy of twins three months afterward, and accouchement at term of two well-developed boys.
Croon speaks of a child seven years old on whom he performed ovariotomy for a round-celled sarcoma.
Robson reports a multi-locular cyst of the ovary with extensive adhesions of the uterus, removed at the tenth week of pregnancy and ovariotomy performed without any interruption of the ordinary course of labor.
Shepherd reports a case of recurrent proliferous cyst in a woman of sixty-three, on whom successful ovariotomy was performed twice within nine months.
Terrier describes double ovariotomy for fibromata in a woman of seventy-seven.
Cutter speaks of a case in which a woman bore a child one year after the performance of ovariotomy, and Pippingskold of two cases of pregnancy after ovariotomy in which the stump as well as the remaining ovary were cauterized.
Galabin had a case of ovariotomy performed on a woman in the sixth month of pregnancy without interruption of pregnancy; Potter had a case of doubleovariotomy with safe delivery at term; and Storry had a similar case.
Normal ovariotomy (removing normal ovaries for a supposed reflex disease) swept the whole country during the eighties and threatened the unsexing of the entire female population.
Cimoroni[180] found after ovariotomy an increase in size of the pituitary body with dilatation of the blood-vessels.
Castration in the male or ovariotomy in the female stops all production of spermin and ovarin.
Double ovariotomy brings on abortion in the early months of pregnancy oftener than in the later, probably from the loss of the corpus luteum, which, it appears, is necessary for the growth of the uterus.
In a certain percentage of cases it is malignant and will kill whether it is removed or not, but the general result of ovariotomy has been the saving of thousands of women from untimely death.
An ovariotomyin 1883 is a very different business, varying in certain important particulars.
On Perforation of the Stomach and Small Intestine as a Sequel to Ovariotomy and Hysterectomy.
It is often stated that Professor Chiene performed ovariotomy on an infant of three months.
When an ovarian tumour is discovered during labour and it impedes delivery, ovariotomy should be performed.
Thus an expectedovariotomy may terminate as a Cæsarean section, or as a hysterectomy.
In total hysterectomy seven times; in the course ofovariotomy on three occasions.
Many years ago I collected the recorded cases and tabulated one hundred instances in which ovariotomy had been performed in infants and girls under fifteen years of age.
In 1896 I was able to collect fifteen recorded cases of double ovariotomy during pregnancy, and sixteen in which ovariotomy was performed during the puerperium, or shortly after abortion.
Some surgeons recommend that in a second ovariotomy the opening may with advantage be made a little to one side of the original incision.
It is also a fact that ovariotomy may be safely carried out between the eighth and ninth months of gestation without precipitating labour, even when the tumour is incarcerated in the pelvis.
The death-rate after ovariotomy is hard to estimate, especially as surgeons differ widely in the classification of the cases.
Single and even double ovariotomy can be performed during puerpery without in any way interfering with involution of the uterus or lactation.
So many examples are known of women who have borne children after unilateral ovariotomy (twins and even triplets) that this alone is sufficient to prohibit the routine ablation of both glands.
It has been said that McDowell conceived the thought of ovariotomy from some suggestions thrown out by this great man.
He charged $500 for an ovariotomy that he went to Nashville, Tenn.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "ovariotomy" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.