Abstract
With a skilled radiologist, a steady patient and a foreign body large enough to cast a shadow, geometric methods of localization are satisfactory. But if the eyes move during exposure the radiogram may give a false position for the foreign body. Particles of metal fastened to the eyeball move with it, preventing a false impression. Various methods of attaching such localizers are mentioned, and a satisfactory one described in detail. Read before the Colorado Congress of Ophthalmology and Oto-Laryngology, July, 1926.
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