A practical treatise on fractures and dislocations . has usually thrust up, to agreater or less extent, the belly of the subscapular muscle. Sir Astley Cooper, Fergusson, and others, when mentioning this formof dislocation, call it a dislocation into the axilla; by Boyer it iscalled a primary luxation forwards. Dr. Wood, of New York, hasreported an example, accompanied with a fracture of the neck of thehumerus, which he has named dislocation under the subscapularsmuscle. The drawing which accompanied the report, made from theautopsy, sufficiently shows that it was a dislocation of the same cha


A practical treatise on fractures and dislocations . has usually thrust up, to agreater or less extent, the belly of the subscapular muscle. Sir Astley Cooper, Fergusson, and others, when mentioning this formof dislocation, call it a dislocation into the axilla; by Boyer it iscalled a primary luxation forwards. Dr. Wood, of New York, hasreported an example, accompanied with a fracture of the neck of thehumerus, which he has named dislocation under the subscapularsmuscle. The drawing which accompanied the report, made from theautopsy, sufficiently shows that it was a dislocation of the same charac-ter as that which wre are now Dr. Parker has called at-tention to a similar case, an account of which was first given in Reeses 1 Wood, New York Journ. of Med., May, 1850, p. 282. 604 DISLOCATIONS OF THE SHOULDER. edition of Coopers Surgical Dictionary. The head of the humerusreposed in the subscapular By Malgaigne, Vidal (de Cassis),and others, this is called a subcoracoid dislocation, a term which, as Fig. 268. Fig.


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade1870, booksubjectfractur, bookyear1875