A practical treatise on fractures and dislocations . Joseph C. Hutchinson, of Brooklyn, 1ST. Y., has reported an ex-ample of this dislocation in which death having occurred four daysafter reduction, he was able to ascertain the character of the the courtesy of Dr. H., I was permitted to be present at thisautopsy, and the lesions were found to be much the same as in thecase related by Syme; but the glutseus minimus was not torn, andthere was added a laceration of the obturator externus. Dr. Lentehas reported one other dissection made after Dr. Bigelow speaks of a dorsal d


A practical treatise on fractures and dislocations . Joseph C. Hutchinson, of Brooklyn, 1ST. Y., has reported an ex-ample of this dislocation in which death having occurred four daysafter reduction, he was able to ascertain the character of the the courtesy of Dr. H., I was permitted to be present at thisautopsy, and the lesions were found to be much the same as in thecase related by Syme; but the glutseus minimus was not torn, andthere was added a laceration of the obturator externus. Dr. Lentehas reported one other dissection made after Dr. Bigelow speaks of a dorsal dislocation as sometimes occupying aposition as low as the upper portion of the ischiatic notch; but thedislocation now under consideration he describes as that in which thehead of the femur having been driven from its socket downwards andbackwards, is subsequently, in the attempt to straighten the limb,carried upwards behind the socket until it is arrested by the strongtendon of the obturator internus, and the subjacent capsule. In some Fiar.


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade1870, booksubjec, booksubjectfractures