A practical treatise on fractures and dislocations . e clinical history of the dislocations by rotation or by renversement is tooincomplete yet to give any hope of their diagnosis being established with pre-cision. I will relate, however, in the way of information, what has been writtenby M. Delorme regarding the signs which, according to his statement, wouldenable one to diagnosticate the dislocations of the astragalus by renversementor upside down. If, in the dislocation without rotation, the two bony borders of the pulley ofthe astragalus be looked for, they begin to be felt very near the h


A practical treatise on fractures and dislocations . e clinical history of the dislocations by rotation or by renversement is tooincomplete yet to give any hope of their diagnosis being established with pre-cision. I will relate, however, in the way of information, what has been writtenby M. Delorme regarding the signs which, according to his statement, wouldenable one to diagnosticate the dislocations of the astragalus by renversementor upside down. If, in the dislocation without rotation, the two bony borders of the pulley ofthe astragalus be looked for, they begin to be felt very near the head, at 1 or \\centimetres from it. In the dislocations by rotation (of 180 degrees or by ren-versement), on the contrary, the projections by which the inferior and posteriorarticular surface of the astragalus is limited, and which were taken for the mar-gins of the facet, are 3J to 4 centimetres behind the head, two fingers breadth,as Chassaignac has observed, who did not take advantage of this sign to estab-lish his diagnosis. Fig. 499. Fig.


Size: 1173px × 2130px
Photo credit: © The Reading Room / Alamy / Afripics
License: Licensed
Model Released: No

Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade1890, booksubjec, booksubjectfractures