. American X-ray journal . ards the child was immediately reliev-ed, as far as urgent respiration symp-toms were concerned, but the pain wasintense until it reached the fluoroscope revealed the marble insitu, and I could not resist securing a ra-diogram. A five-minute exposure wasat once made. A few moments later themarble must have passed into the stom-ach, as all pain suddenly ceased. Thesubsequent history of the case is with-out interest, as two days later the objectpassed per viam naturalcm. Fig. 2 shows distinctly the absence ofthe head of the femur through tubercu-lar disinte


. American X-ray journal . ards the child was immediately reliev-ed, as far as urgent respiration symp-toms were concerned, but the pain wasintense until it reached the fluoroscope revealed the marble insitu, and I could not resist securing a ra-diogram. A five-minute exposure wasat once made. A few moments later themarble must have passed into the stom-ach, as all pain suddenly ceased. Thesubsequent history of the case is with-out interest, as two days later the objectpassed per viam naturalcm. Fig. 2 shows distinctly the absence ofthe head of the femur through tubercu-lar disintegration, and the empty ace-tabulum. The radiogram, Fig. 3, shows a five-day-old subject, injected w ith liquid mer-cury. To the anatomist the study of in-jected vessels is particularly interesting,the relationship to the osseous systemshowing far better than some dissec-tions. The early differentiation between pri-mary acetubular disease and tuberculardisease of the head of the femur is only THE AMERICAN X-RAY JOURNAL. 359.


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