. The management and diseases of the dog. Dogs; Dog breeds. ACCIDENTS AND OPERATIONS. 3ST location, the treatment is doubly difficult, as the dislocation must first be reduced ; this, under the circumstances, is no easy task, and then the fracture is to be attended to. Occasionally it is necessary to have recourse to the latter first, in order to permit the extension required to reduce the dislocation ; after which it is generally advisable to reset the fracture, owing to the unavoidable displacement consequent on the opera- tion. DISLOCATIONS. Dislocation, luxation, or the displacement of a j


. The management and diseases of the dog. Dogs; Dog breeds. ACCIDENTS AND OPERATIONS. 3ST location, the treatment is doubly difficult, as the dislocation must first be reduced ; this, under the circumstances, is no easy task, and then the fracture is to be attended to. Occasionally it is necessary to have recourse to the latter first, in order to permit the extension required to reduce the dislocation ; after which it is generally advisable to reset the fracture, owing to the unavoidable displacement consequent on the opera- tion. DISLOCATIONS. Dislocation, luxation, or the displacement of a joint without fracture, is very commonly seen in canine practice. The dislocations usually met with are in the shoulder, elbow, knee, hip, stifle, hock, toes. Predisposing Ca«j«.—Congenital deformity, elongation of. Fig. 38. Dislocation of Please note that these images are extracted from scanned page images that may have been digitally enhanced for readability - coloration and appearance of these illustrations may not perfectly resemble the original Hill, John Woodroffe, d. 1909. New York, W. R. Jenkins


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Keywords: ., bo, bookcentury1800, bookdecade1880, booksubjectdogs, bookyear1881