A treatise on orthopedic surgery . cter should not be performed unless asepsis can be assured,unless the operator is familiar with the anatomy of the parts,and unless the essential after-treatment can be provided. Review of the Treatment of Congenital Dislocation of the —The prospect of success in treatment stands in direct re-lation to the age of the patient, since the degree of the patho-logical changes, that make cure difficult or impossible, dependsas in acquired dislocations, upon the duration of the disability. ^ Hoffa has performed the operation 248 times, with 10 deaths, 8 due tot


A treatise on orthopedic surgery . cter should not be performed unless asepsis can be assured,unless the operator is familiar with the anatomy of the parts,and unless the essential after-treatment can be provided. Review of the Treatment of Congenital Dislocation of the —The prospect of success in treatment stands in direct re-lation to the age of the patient, since the degree of the patho-logical changes, that make cure difficult or impossible, dependsas in acquired dislocations, upon the duration of the disability. ^ Hoffa has performed the operation 248 times, with 10 deaths, 8 due tothe operation, the last 132 operations without a death. Lorenz, in 260operations, lost 4 patients from septicamia.—Eeport of the ThirteenthInternational Congress, Paris, August, 1900. CONGENITAL DISLOCATION OF HIP AND COXA VABA. 569 Consequently, treatment should be applied as soon as the dis-placement is discovered, and, as has been stated, there is littleexcuse for not making the correct diagnosis when the child be- FiG. Fig. 378.


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Keywords: ., bookauthorwhitmanr, bookcentury1900, bookdecade1910, bookyear1910