A manual of military surgery, for the use of surgeons in the Confederate States Army; with explanatory plates of all useful operations . j£\h~tj £ Gxfr>veC£, £?£rvr^to;, 5 c f . g a. f 1 C I. FIG 3. I r i a 6 Plate 12. Fig. 1.—Resection of the shoulder by a deltoid flap, d, the flapmade from the deltoid muscle turned up upon the shoulder; h, head ofhumerus isolated from the glenoid cavity ; /, chain-saw passed behindthe head of the bone in the act of resecting. Fig. 2.—Resection of the shoulder by the straight incision. /, posi-tion of the clavicle; c, accromial process of the scapula; a pe


A manual of military surgery, for the use of surgeons in the Confederate States Army; with explanatory plates of all useful operations . j£\h~tj £ Gxfr>veC£, £?£rvr^to;, 5 c f . g a. f 1 C I. FIG 3. I r i a 6 Plate 12. Fig. 1.—Resection of the shoulder by a deltoid flap, d, the flapmade from the deltoid muscle turned up upon the shoulder; h, head ofhumerus isolated from the glenoid cavity ; /, chain-saw passed behindthe head of the bone in the act of resecting. Fig. 2.—Resection of the shoulder by the straight incision. /, posi-tion of the clavicle; c, accromial process of the scapula; a perpen-dicular incision of five inches in length passing down to the bone, com-mencing at the accromial process; d d, two retractors or hooks fordrawing aside the soft parts, exposing clearly, a, the head of the hu-merus ; /, resection of the sternal end of the clavicle, the soft partsdivided by an incision upon and parallel with tho clavicle—the softparts retracted to expose the bone. Fig. 3.—Resection of the elbow-joint. 1, 2, 3, 4, of fig. 4, marksout extent and direction of the incisions; 1, hand of assistant raisingthe posterior flap; 2, joint exposed; 3, saw applied to, 4, th


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade1860, booksubjectconfede, bookyear1864