. Medical and surgical therapy. Fig. 36.—Appliance for correction of musculo-spiral paralysis(front view). 38) is of an analogous design, but can be locked, thehand remaining slightly hyperextended to allow heavyobjects to be grasped; it is a good apparatus forworking with.^ 0ther equally practical appliances are those ofPrivat and Belot (figs. 39 and 40), Leri and Dagnan-Bouveret (fig. 41), Mouchet and Anceau, Rieffel andRipert. The commission appointed by the Neurological 1 Bevue Neurologiqucy July 1916, p. 123, 336 TREATMENT AND REPAIR OF NERVE LESIONS Society to investigate prosthetic appl


. Medical and surgical therapy. Fig. 36.—Appliance for correction of musculo-spiral paralysis(front view). 38) is of an analogous design, but can be locked, thehand remaining slightly hyperextended to allow heavyobjects to be grasped; it is a good apparatus forworking with.^ 0ther equally practical appliances are those ofPrivat and Belot (figs. 39 and 40), Leri and Dagnan-Bouveret (fig. 41), Mouchet and Anceau, Rieffel andRipert. The commission appointed by the Neurological 1 Bevue Neurologiqucy July 1916, p. 123, 336 TREATMENT AND REPAIR OF NERVE LESIONS Society to investigate prosthetic appliances forpatients suffering from wounds of the nerves hasdirected its attention mainly to the requirements ofworking appliances in cases of musculo-spiral foUowing are the principal remarks contained intheir second report:— The dominant question is for the hand to find a. Fig. 37.—Appliance for permanent musculo-spiral paralysis seenfrom the upper surface. (Froment and Muller,) fixed point in the apparatus which will oppose itstendency to drop, even during effort and when theobject grasped is heavy. * Can an extensor spring supply this desideratum ?To this we have to reply in the negative. . Thus


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