| Daniel John Cunningham - 1903 - 640 pages
...superficial head of the flexor brevis pollicis, and the opponens pollicis. The digital nerves which run along the ulnar side of the thumb, and the radial side of the index, give several branches to the fold of integument which stretches between the roots of these digits ;... | |
| William Hayden Rockwell (Jr) - 1905 - 362 pages
...branches, running between the flexor tendons and superficial palmar arch; the outer three supply the sides of the thumb and the radial side of the index finger; the inner two [175] DISSECTING MANUAL. divide at the finger clefts into branches supplying the adjacent... | |
| Daniel John Cunningham - 1905 - 1456 pages
...brevis pollicis. The cutaneous branches are five in number. Three separate branches supply each «le of the thumb and the radial side of the index finger. The two remaining ranches subdivide at the cleft between the second and third, and the third and mrth fingers... | |
| Daniel John Cunningham - 1908 - 662 pages
...head of the flexor brevis • gollicis, and the opponens pollicis. The digital nerves which run along the ulnar side of the thumb, and the radial side of the index, give several branches to the fold of integument which stretches between the roots of these digits ;... | |
| 1908 - 614 pages
...flexor surface of the right arm, forearm, and hand. Upon the hand the eruption involved the inside of the thumb and the radial side of the index finger. The eruption consisted of scaly patches from pin-head to pea-size in the beginning, but which later coalesced... | |
| Daniel John Cunningham - 1909 - 1538 pages
...brevis pollicis. The cutaneous branches are five in number. Three separate branches supply each ide of the thumb and the radial side of the index finger. The two remaining pancb.es subdivide at the cleft between the second and third, and the third and h fingers... | |
| Henry Erdmann Radasch - 1917 - 596 pages
...and some of the fingers. Its digital branches are five in number; the first three supply both sides of the thumb and the radial side of the index finger. The other two branches divide into two each for the contiguous sides of the index and middle and the middle... | |
| Berish Strauch - 1993 - 588 pages
...is selected; for the index finger, the contralateral foot is chosen, to afford better sensibility to the ulnar side of the thumb and the radial side of the index. The dimensions and location of the flap vary according to requirements in the recipient finger. 1 .... | |
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