. An American text-book of obstetrics. For practitioners and students. Fig. 354.—Kyphoscoliosis (Le DYSTOCIA. Plate 1. Lumbo-dorsal kyphoscoliosis (Schauta). 2. Lordosis from paralysis of spinal muscle- illir-t i. 3. Skel-eton of a girl with coxalgia (Medical Museum, University of Pennsylvaniai. 4. Rear view. 5. Side view,of an obliquely-contracted pelvis, the result of tuberculous disease in one knee-joint (Hirst). 6. Scoli-i-from unilateral atrophy of the spinal muscles (Hirst). DYSTOCIA. 541 which is driven inward upon the pelvic canal. This displacement of theinnominate bone is the re
. An American text-book of obstetrics. For practitioners and students. Fig. 354.—Kyphoscoliosis (Le DYSTOCIA. Plate 1. Lumbo-dorsal kyphoscoliosis (Schauta). 2. Lordosis from paralysis of spinal muscle- illir-t i. 3. Skel-eton of a girl with coxalgia (Medical Museum, University of Pennsylvaniai. 4. Rear view. 5. Side view,of an obliquely-contracted pelvis, the result of tuberculous disease in one knee-joint (Hirst). 6. Scoli-i-from unilateral atrophy of the spinal muscles (Hirst). DYSTOCIA. 541 which is driven inward upon the pelvic canal. This displacement of theinnominate bone is the result of an arrested development on the correspond-ing side of the pelvis, and is very likely associated with an atrophy of thesacral ala and an ankylosis of the sacro-iliac joint. The contraction of thepelvic canal is much more serious in this form, and there may be all thedifficulties in labor encountered in the true Naegele pelvis. Luxation of the Femora.—Dislocation of the thigh-bones, if congenitalor occurring early in childhood and not corrected, has some effect upon thesize and shape of the pelvis, but usua
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Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade1890, booksubjectobstetrics, bookyear1