The principles of surgery . iculating ends of the bonesbecoming carious, on establishment ofthe suppurative stage. Or the cariousstate may originate in the cancellatedtexture; cartilage and synovial mem-brane becoming secondarily then there is, usually, the prece-dence and coexistence of tuberculardeposit; the case being one of an ob-viously scrofulous kind. According tothe mode of origin, the symptoms vary;assuming the type of one or other ofthe affections which have been describedin the preceding pages. In fact, thisdisease may be practically regarded asthe advanced stage of the


The principles of surgery . iculating ends of the bonesbecoming carious, on establishment ofthe suppurative stage. Or the cariousstate may originate in the cancellatedtexture; cartilage and synovial mem-brane becoming secondarily then there is, usually, the prece-dence and coexistence of tuberculardeposit; the case being one of an ob-viously scrofulous kind. According tothe mode of origin, the symptoms vary;assuming the type of one or other ofthe affections which have been describedin the preceding pages. In fact, thisdisease may be practically regarded asthe advanced stage of the three mostformidable affections to which joints areArticular canes affecting the hip-joint. liable: degeneration of the synovial membrane, destruction of cartilage, and suppurative disintegration of the articulating ends of the bones—with or without the scrofulous the treatment, three results may be looked Fig. 172. to ; as in ordinary caries. 1. Cure may be, in a great measure, spontaneous. On esta- Fig.


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