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of my own children, who suffer occasionally from defective teeth,
apply it for themselves for a few minutes, and return to their
room relieved from pain, and sure of a comfortable night's rest."
"We have just said that the Faradaic tooth extraction is of Amer-
ican origin; but we see that a wide attention is awakened in
England on this subject. Mr. Sharpe, the dentist for the Chester
Infirmary, says he has lately " extracted one hundred and fifty
teeth from people of all ranks, of both sexes, and of every age.
The testimony of each of these has been mostly satisfactory; a
current of electricity having been directed through the tooth to
be extracted ; some persons said they experienced pain, but not
so much as usual; others, that they felt no pain whatever. Some
patients have said, they were ' conscious of the pull, but the
customary pang was absent.' The exclamation of many, after
the operation, has been,' 0, how delightful!' ' How very nice !'
' How very wonderful!' &c. One gentleman, who was rather
sceptical, after having a tooth extracted, said, ' Well, I would
not disbelieve a man now if he should tell me he had learned
to fly.' Feeling desirous of getting as satisfactory evidence as
possible, I persuaded my youngest son, who is not more fond of
having his teeth drawn than other boys of his age, to have a
temporary molar tooth removed in this way, in order that he
might be able to tell me what he thought of it. As soon as the
tooth was out, he exclaimed, ' T/iafs the thing-. It will do it,
papa.' "
Dr. Lobb, of the Western General Dispensary, says, " I have
now used the inverse continuous current of electricity (galva-
nism) for more than twelve months, for the cure of some forms
of neuralgia, toothache, &c. I have never used it to prevent
pain during the extraction of teeth, but from what I know of its
success in toothache, I have no doubt it will yet be found to be
perfectly successful." Dr. Richardson, physician to the Royal
Infirmary, &c, says in a recent paper, " The present unsatisfac-
tory mode of preventing pain in surgical operations must un-
questionably be ultimately superseded by some better process.
It will be read of, some day, as a rude science that leads the
whole human organism into the realm of dissolution, in order