*A. a. IS4. A preparation, showing a small tumor of the
lip, with an enlarged nerve leading from it. The tumor was
removed by Doctor Harrison, on account of the excessive pain
attendant upon it.
*A. a. 13s. A wet preparation of an aneurism, by anastomosis
of both lips. The enlargement is confined to the free,
moveable textures constituting the lips, and exhibits itself
equally on their cutaneous and mucous surfaces.
*A. a. IS6. A bottle, containing a tooth affected with
caries, and encrusted with a mass of tartar deposited from the
saliva.
#A. a. 18b Fungous excrescence protruding from between
the canine and first bi-cuspid tooth of a child; it sprung
from the alveolus, and caused the teeth to drop out. Some
time, after, the fungus re-appeared, and its further progress
was arrested by the use of the actual cauteryH-Pro/. Harrison.
*A. a. IS8. Oast of a large, cancerous fungus of the lower
lip of an elderly man, removed without success.
*A. a. 139. Oast of a cancer of the lower lip in an old man.
The place of the lip is occupied, from angle to angle, by a
large, irregular, cancerous fungus.
#A. a. 1310. Oast of a cancer of the lower lip in a middle-
aged man. The entire lip, with both commissures, presents a
deep, eroding ulcer, with hard, everted edges.
*A. a. IS11. Oast, showing a return of cancer in the
lower lip, after removal of the primary disease by the knife.
The relajpse shows itself in the cicatrix of the wound, which
had remained healed for a short time. The secondary disease
appears in the form of small, irregularly nodulated eminences.
#A. a. 1312. Cast of a cancerous tumor in the substance of
the lower lip of an old man. There is no abrasion or ulceration
of the skin, or mucous membrane.
#A. a. IS15. Oast of the lower lip of an aged female,
exhibiting a cancerous wart in its centre.
*A. a. 1314. Oast of a cancer of the upper lip of an old
man. The entire lip, up to the nostrils, has been destroyed.
*A. a. 131S. Oast of the face of an old man, showing the
cicatrix and state of the mouth after removal of the left
angle and part of both lips, in the operation for cancer.
*A. a. 13l6. Oast of a cancerous ulcer of the lower lip, and
left angle of the mouth, in a young male individual.
#A. a. IS17. Oast of the mouth, after removal of a considerable
portion of the lower lip for cancer.
*A. a. 1318. Oast of the face, after removal of the entire
lower lip, with both angles of the mouth, for cancer. The
cicatrix, which extends to the inferior part of the chin, is
stretched tightly over the jaw and teeth ; and the aperture of
the mouth is reduced to a narrow, transversely oval and
unyielding slit, less than an inch in diameter,
#A. a. lS^. Oast of the mouth of another individual, under
nearly similar circumstances, in which there is a similar disposition
of lip and cicatrix. Both preparations go to demonstrate
the quantity of lip which may be removed, with a
certainty of re-union of the divided surfaces, under careful
attention in after treatment.
A. a. 25. Congenital fissure of the upper lip. (See Anatomical
Catalogue, Or. a. 44.)
*A. a. 251. Cast of a congenital fissure of the upper lip, in
an adult, extending through the hard palate along the floor
of the left nostril.
*A. a. 252. Oast of a congenital fissure of. the upper lip, in
an adult, extending as far as the entrance into the left nostril.
*A. a. 253. Cast of a congenital double fissure of the upper
lip in an adult, extending into both nostrils, and leaving an
intermediate projecting portion of lip opposite the septum
nasi.
A. a. 30. Tumor removed from the lower jaw of a girl
aged twenty-three. It appears at first, sight cartilaginous