. Medical and surgical therapy. 2. That the intervening bridge is too thin, long,and ragged, and has hardly any value from the pointof view of regeneration. This bridge is always exclusively made up of fibroustissue, to which is added a quantityof muscular tissue elements (fig. 11). This type of lesion, which is fre-quently met with in lesions of themusculo-spiral when the nerve islost in the callosity of a fractureof the humerus, requires, from asurgical point of view, the wide re-section of the fibrous bridge andthe freshening up of the two endsof the nerve. Lateral pseudo-neuroma, unth orwi


. Medical and surgical therapy. 2. That the intervening bridge is too thin, long,and ragged, and has hardly any value from the pointof view of regeneration. This bridge is always exclusively made up of fibroustissue, to which is added a quantityof muscular tissue elements (fig. 11). This type of lesion, which is fre-quently met with in lesions of themusculo-spiral when the nerve islost in the callosity of a fractureof the humerus, requires, from asurgical point of view, the wide re-section of the fibrous bridge andthe freshening up of the two endsof the nerve. Lateral pseudo-neuroma, unth orwithout a slight lateral notch.—Thisis the lateral nodule of Sicard andJourdan, and the eccentric or lateralcheloid of M. and Mme. swelling is irregular, and morein evidence on one side of the nerve(fig. 12). Histologically, at the site of thelesion some nerve fibres are to beseen pushed back by the fibroustissue, and others which had strayedfrom their useful direction (fig. 13). Finally, there is a kind of lesionf


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1910, bookpub, booksubjecttherapeutics