. General surgical pathology and therapeutics, in fifty lectures : a textbook for students and physicians. Centra! end ofa torn brach-ial artery. Fig. 41. Fig. Torn-out. middle finger, with all its Arm torn out, with scapulatendons. and clavicle. 174 CONTUSED AND LACERATED WOUNDS OF THE SOFT PARTS. and clavicle so torn from the thorax, by a wheel of machinery, that itwas only attached at the shoulder by a strip of skin two inches wide(Fig. 42). The axillary artery did not bleed a drop; both ends wereclosed by torsion (Fig. 40). The unfortunate fellow died soon afterthe injury. Tearing out


. General surgical pathology and therapeutics, in fifty lectures : a textbook for students and physicians. Centra! end ofa torn brach-ial artery. Fig. 41. Fig. Torn-out. middle finger, with all its Arm torn out, with scapulatendons. and clavicle. 174 CONTUSED AND LACERATED WOUNDS OF THE SOFT PARTS. and clavicle so torn from the thorax, by a wheel of machinery, that itwas only attached at the shoulder by a strip of skin two inches wide(Fig. 42). The axillary artery did not bleed a drop; both ends wereclosed by torsion (Fig. 40). The unfortunate fellow died soon afterthe injury. Tearing out of entire extremities is usually quickly fataL CHAPTER FRACTURES OF BORES. LECTURE XIV. Causes, Different Varieties of Fractures.—Symptoms, Diagnosis.—Course and ExternalSymptoms.—Anatomy of Healing, Formation of Callus.—Source of the Inflamma-tory Osseous New Formation.—Histology. Gentlemen: Hitherto we have been exclusively occupied withinjuries of the soft parts ; it is time to consider the bones. You willfind that the processes that Nature excites for the restoration of theparts are essentially the same that you already know; but the


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade1870, booksubjecttherapeutics, bookyea