Medical and surgical reports . palpation, itwas assumed that the line on the skiagraph had really no significance;. FIG. I . — Diagram showing the positions of the four pins(black lines) as determined by the skiagraph. The dottedline near the umbilicus is the faint line referred to inthe text. that there was no needle in that locality. Farther search wastherefore abandoned. The patient made an uninterrupted recovery. Case II.—ruptured aneurism of the abdominal aorta. A colored man, thirty-six years old, entered the service of on May 19, 1900. He had been a waiter, and was


Medical and surgical reports . palpation, itwas assumed that the line on the skiagraph had really no significance;. FIG. I . — Diagram showing the positions of the four pins(black lines) as determined by the skiagraph. The dottedline near the umbilicus is the faint line referred to inthe text. that there was no needle in that locality. Farther search wastherefore abandoned. The patient made an uninterrupted recovery. Case II.—ruptured aneurism of the abdominal aorta. A colored man, thirty-six years old, entered the service of on May 19, 1900. He had been a waiter, and was appears that about three months before coming to the hospital hefirst noticed a swelling in the abdomen. This swelling increased insize up to the time of his entering the hospital. On the left side of the mans abdomen, and extending from thecostal border to Pouparts ligament, was a firm tumor — not movable,not tender. It had a distinct expansile pulsation. It was dull onpercussion, and nothing definite could be heard on auscultation. The man lay in bed, in the left lateral decubitus, with his left hipsl


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade1860, bookidmedicalsurgi, bookyear1864