Clinical memoirs on the diseases of women . U. Uterus. C. Cervix. T. Tumour. u. Uterus, c. Cervix. T. Tumour. T. Axis of vagina. v. Axis of vagina. which is the rarest form, we find the cul-de-sac occupied by thetumour, not only wider, but shallower than that on the opposite also find that the uterus is sometimes so twisted, that the cervix isdrawn away from the cul-de-sac in which tlie tumour is situatedand looks to the opposite side, while the fundus uteri is inclined tothe iliac fossa of the affected side {vide Case XIII.) This latero-Aersion which is the most frequent of all the di


Clinical memoirs on the diseases of women . U. Uterus. C. Cervix. T. Tumour. u. Uterus, c. Cervix. T. Tumour. T. Axis of vagina. v. Axis of vagina. which is the rarest form, we find the cul-de-sac occupied by thetumour, not only wider, but shallower than that on the opposite also find that the uterus is sometimes so twisted, that the cervix isdrawn away from the cul-de-sac in which tlie tumour is situatedand looks to the opposite side, while the fundus uteri is inclined tothe iliac fossa of the affected side {vide Case XIII.) This latero-Aersion which is the most frequent of all the displacements pro-duced in the acute stage of pelvi-peritonitis, and which is repre-sented in Fig. 9, is rarely simple; it is almost constantly asso-ciated with a slight inclination of the fundus backwards, togetherwuth some rotation of the organ on its axis which carries forwardsthe corresponding border of the tumour. In Fig. 10, the cervix, instead of behig pushed away by tlietumour, seems drawn into the affected cul-de-sac; which, in this


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Keywords: ., bookauthorbern, bookcentury1800, bookdecade1860, booksubjectwomen