. A practical treatise on fractures and dislocations. er. The subscapularis usually is widely torn ; inMcNamaras case, (pioted by Malgaigne, it was untorn, and the headof the humerus had stripped it away from the scapula and had risen • ]\[:ilij;:ui;no: Loc. 11. - . 1 626 DISLOCATIONS. above its upper border, lying against the root of the coracoid pro-cess. No muscle or tendon was torn. In one of my own the headof the bone had passed beneath and entirely to the inner side of thesubscapulars. The capsule is extensively torn, and the greater tuberosity usuallybroken off in whole or
. A practical treatise on fractures and dislocations. er. The subscapularis usually is widely torn ; inMcNamaras case, (pioted by Malgaigne, it was untorn, and the headof the humerus had stripped it away from the scapula and had risen • ]\[:ilij;:ui;no: Loc. 11. - . 1 626 DISLOCATIONS. above its upper border, lying against the root of the coracoid pro-cess. No muscle or tendon was torn. In one of my own the headof the bone had passed beneath and entirely to the inner side of thesubscapulars. The capsule is extensively torn, and the greater tuberosity usuallybroken off in whole or in part and lying in the glenoid fossa. The head of the humerus passes behind the muscles arising fromthe coracoid process (in one recorded case, Rosers,^ in front of thecoraco-brachialis and biceps and behind the pectoralis minor) andoccasionally is partly interposed between the contiguous borders of thedeltoid and pectoralis major, being then subcutaneous. It may lieimmediately under or a little behind the clavicle, in one case (Meyer) Fig.
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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1910, booksubjectfractur, bookyear1912