The posterior part of a human (or animal) body from the neck to the end of the spine.
1The bullet entered the sole and emerged from the dorsum of the foot.
2In two patients no reduction of the nasal dorsum was found.
3Full-thickness skin wounds were created on the dorsum of diabetic mice.
4Cutaneous heat stimuli were delivered to the dorsum of the right hand in 13 volunteers.
5They made it to the dorsum of the other airship by way of metal rungs.
6Never touch the arch of the left-foot dorsum.
7The implantation is done via a hemicircular incision on the dorsum of the penis in the sulcus coronarius.
8We ran close to Akromasi, or One-tree Point, upon whose flat dorsum linger the bush-grown ruins of a fort.
9In all cases it accurately describes the major pathological conditions of the dorsum, if present, as noted on physical examination.
10The posterior portion of the tongue dorsum seems to be an important source of odourous compounds, regardless of periodontal condition.
11In ten of these twelve patients a significant volume reduction in the area of the nasal dorsum was found with stereophotogrammetry.
12The operation is not difficult, and requires merely a straight incision over the dorsum, extending the whole length of the bone.
13Skin perfusion in the dorsum of the hand was measured using LASCA, at baseline, after two-minute 12°C water immersion, and during rewarming.
14When a babe the patient had, on the dorsum of the little finger, a small nevus, which was quiescent for many years.
15Vitiligo in autoimmune thyroid disease was most frequently found on dorsum hands and forearms, and usually preceded the onset of thyroid disease.
16I made two small incisions in the region of the wound upon the dorsum of the hand, and injected permanganate of potassium freely.