. Archives of physical medicine and rehabilitation . Fig. 10—Mr. McK., age 60. Complaint:Pain in riglit shoulder, following injuryone year ago. Nausea with chills attimes. History: Shoulder pain oneyear. Nausea and chills since childhood. Diagnosis: Teeth infection. Non-rotated cecum. Osteo-arthritis i-K I 1 Mr ,\i, I 1 . ,1^, jj , I luiiibiir since : Notices spine bending side-ways. Duration of symptoms one Tonsils infected. Siginoidbanding. Spondylitis of fourth and fifthlumbar vertebra with sacralization. after thei


. Archives of physical medicine and rehabilitation . Fig. 10—Mr. McK., age 60. Complaint:Pain in riglit shoulder, following injuryone year ago. Nausea with chills attimes. History: Shoulder pain oneyear. Nausea and chills since childhood. Diagnosis: Teeth infection. Non-rotated cecum. Osteo-arthritis i-K I 1 Mr ,\i, I 1 . ,1^, jj , I luiiibiir since : Notices spine bending side-ways. Duration of symptoms one Tonsils infected. Siginoidbanding. Spondylitis of fourth and fifthlumbar vertebra with sacralization. after their surgical removal, we areconvinced that their pathological sig-nificance is of the first order. The subject of intestinal bands andadhesions has given rise to a greatdeal of controversy. Some claimthat they are always pathological and innervation and upsets the normalequilibrium of the affected area. Intestinal adhesions, on the otherhand, are always the result of a localperitonitis, caused by injury eithermechanical or chemical or bacterial. Bands are quite easily removed. their removal is productive of good. Their removal gives relief from symp-Others hold that they are largely de- °s. and they do not frequently re-velopmental and should not be touched and that in so far as they are patho-logical the res


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