. A practical treatise on fractures and dislocations. el: Die Heilkuiide. 1899, I, quoted by Dollinjier. 6 Lorenz : Deutsche Zeitschrift fiir Chir., 1900-01, vol. Iviii. p. 593. 240 FRACTURES. piece of bone could be indistinctly felt below the coracoid. The out-lines of the shoulder were normal. Jossel ^ reports two cases accompanying backward dislocation of theshoulder (q. v.) ; in both thetuberosity remained attached to the sub-scapularis, and in one it was broken into two pieces. Engel ^ reportsone. Treatment. The treatment would be immobilization in inward rota-tion, possibly aided by pres


. A practical treatise on fractures and dislocations. el: Die Heilkuiide. 1899, I, quoted by Dollinjier. 6 Lorenz : Deutsche Zeitschrift fiir Chir., 1900-01, vol. Iviii. p. 593. 240 FRACTURES. piece of bone could be indistinctly felt below the coracoid. The out-lines of the shoulder were normal. Jossel ^ reports two cases accompanying backward dislocation of theshoulder (q. v.) ; in both thetuberosity remained attached to the sub-scapularis, and in one it was broken into two pieces. Engel ^ reportsone. Treatment. The treatment would be immobilization in inward rota-tion, possibly aided by pressure on the outer aspect of the shoulder tooppose a tendency to outward displacement. D. Separation of the Epiphysis. The upper epiphysis of the humerus comprises the head and thetuberosities. The epiphyseal line runs upward and outward along thelower and inner half of the anatomical neck and then transverselyunder or through the tuberosities to the outer edge, its level rising asthe individual grows older^ and passing above part of the insertion of. Fig. 113.


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1910, booksubjectfractur, bookyear1912