The Cleveland medical journal . sides. There is incontinenceof feces and urine. , The characteristic symptoms were the persistent unconscious-ness, the incontinence of urine and feces and the subsequent rapidrise in temperature. The pressure of the fluid in the subarachnoidspace was 250 mm. of water and the blood pressure was 180, bothmoderately high. There were no distinctly localizing phenomena, 344 The Cleveland Medical Journal except perhaps some irregularity of the pupils, but the pupillarymanifestations of intracranial lesions are so irregular as to be oflittle value. The operation consi


The Cleveland medical journal . sides. There is incontinenceof feces and urine. , The characteristic symptoms were the persistent unconscious-ness, the incontinence of urine and feces and the subsequent rapidrise in temperature. The pressure of the fluid in the subarachnoidspace was 250 mm. of water and the blood pressure was 180, bothmoderately high. There were no distinctly localizing phenomena, 344 The Cleveland Medical Journal except perhaps some irregularity of the pupils, but the pupillarymanifestations of intracranial lesions are so irregular as to be oflittle value. The operation consisted in a bilateral temporal craniectomywith the establishment of free dural openings. When the durawas opened the brain bulged considerably, the pial veins wereengorged, there were evidences of small pial hemorrhages, andthe brain appeared edematous. There was very little visible pulsa-tion either before or after the dura was opened. The operation ^ -T- n n Temperature Mate Iime tonpsp. <ts 9$ qr 9f 9? /op 101 /PL 103 lOlf. FIGURE characteristic rise of temperature in fatal case of cerebral contusion.


Size: 3069px × 814px
Photo credit: © The Reading Room / Alamy / Afripics
License: Licensed
Model Released: No

Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1900, bookpublish, booksubjectmedicine