The rules of aseptic and antiseptic surgery; a practical treatise for the use of students and the general practitioner . .The arm was put up in extension ina couple of lateral pasteboard fever followed. Dec. mh.—Firstchange of dressings. In anaesthesiathe tube was removed, and the armwas flexed to an acute angle and putup in this position in two lateralpasteboard splints. Dec. 19th.—Pas-sive motion was practiced in anaes-thesia, and the arm was fixed in thestraight position. Dec. 23d.—Passivemotion without ether. Fixation atan acute angle. Dec. 29th.—Freepassive motion to normal lim
The rules of aseptic and antiseptic surgery; a practical treatise for the use of students and the general practitioner . .The arm was put up in extension ina couple of lateral pasteboard fever followed. Dec. mh.—Firstchange of dressings. In anaesthesiathe tube was removed, and the armwas flexed to an acute angle and putup in this position in two lateralpasteboard splints. Dec. 19th.—Pas-sive motion was practiced in anaes-thesia, and the arm was fixed in thestraight position. Dec. 23d.—Passivemotion without ether. Fixation atan acute angle. Dec. 29th.—Freepassive motion to normal abandoned and active move-ments commenced. March 3d.—Outline of elbow almost and extension normal. Case II.—Willie H., aged elev-en. Very pronounced gun-stock de-formity due to fracture of the elbow-joint sustained two and a half yearsago. The treatment hud been conducted by a surgeon of good repute. Flexion couldbe carried to a right angle, extension to about one hundred and thirty degrees. shows the boys arm in full extension. June 17, 1887.—Arthrotomy done at Mount. Fio. 77.—Gun-stoek deformity due to T-lracture ofthe lower end of the humerus. Willie case. SPECIAL APPLICATION OF THE ASEPTIC METHOD. 83 Sinai Hospital revealed a very curious condition of things. The broken-off externalcondyle and capitellum occupied a position similar to that observed in the precedingcase. The ulna was dislocated backward andinward from the fragment representing the tro-chlea, which was attached by callus to the an-terior aspect of the lower end of the a T-shaped fracture of the lowerend of the humerus had taken place. The ar-ticular surface had a most grotesque shape. ThecartUaginons surfaces of the trochlea and sig-moid incisure were coated with a dense massof connective tissue. The broken-off coracoidprocess was attached to the fragment of thetrochlea. The articular sui-face was pared offto approximate the shape of a
Size: 1178px × 2121px
Photo credit: © The Reading Room / Alamy / Afripics
License: Licensed
Model Released: No
Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade1880, bookpublishernewyo, bookyear1888