Definition of Colotomies

1. colotomy [n] - See also: colotomy

Lexicographical Neighbors of Colotomies

colossus
colossuses
colossæum
colossæums
colostomies
colostomy
colostomy bag
colostral
colostration
colostric
colostrorrhoea
colostrous
colostrum
colostrum corpuscle
colostrums
colotomies (current term)
colotomy
colour
colour'd
colour-blind
colour-blindness
colour-contrast microscope
colour-coordinated
colour-fast
colour TV
colour TV tube
colour aberration
colour agnosia
colour bar
colour bars

Literary usage of Colotomies

Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:

1. A Treatise on Diseases of the Anus, Rectum, and Pelvic Colon by James Percival Tuttle (1905)
"Thirty-two primary colotomies were done with 14 deaths, a mortality of 43.7 per cent. The introduction of these tables would consume too much space. ..."

2. The American Journal of the Medical Sciences by Southern Society for Clinical Investigation (U.S.) (1889)
"Certainly the man who has done sixty-four lumbar colotomies knows a good deal about the advantages and disadvantages of that operation, and his opinion ..."

3. Annual of the Universal Medical Sciencesedited by [Anonymus AC02809657] edited by [Anonymus AC02809657] (1892)
"Does he know of any such cases of his own knowledge 1 It is the custom of all men who do colotomies to teach that it should only be done as a last resort, ..."

4. Therapeutic Gazette (1912)
"18, 1911) notes that clinical evidence, derived from the sensations of patients who have colotomies, clearly shows that most of the successful cases have ..."

5. The Dublin Journal of Medical Science (1896)
"For congenital malformation in infants, impossible to be treated through the peritoneum, I have performed four inguinal colotomies, one lumbar, ..."

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