. The American journal of roentgenology, radium therapy and nuclear medicine . Fig. 3. Posterior View of Fig. 2. (Goldthwait.) Show-s the wide space left beneath the arch for thecauda equina. phasize the value of the roentgen ray as ameans of proving out the diagnosis. Theaccompanying reproductions of the roent-genograms, made stereoscopically, show. Fig, 5. Posterior View of Fig. 4. (Goldthwait.) Shows sufficient space for the passage of the caudaequina between the arch of the 5th lumbar and the bodyof the sacrum. Spondylolisthesis or Lumbosacral Dislocation 19 the condition plainly. In view


. The American journal of roentgenology, radium therapy and nuclear medicine . Fig. 3. Posterior View of Fig. 2. (Goldthwait.) Show-s the wide space left beneath the arch for thecauda equina. phasize the value of the roentgen ray as ameans of proving out the diagnosis. Theaccompanying reproductions of the roent-genograms, made stereoscopically, show. Fig, 5. Posterior View of Fig. 4. (Goldthwait.) Shows sufficient space for the passage of the caudaequina between the arch of the 5th lumbar and the bodyof the sacrum. Spondylolisthesis or Lumbosacral Dislocation 19 the condition plainly. In view of this fact,it would seem the correct method of pro-cedure to lose as little time as possible be-tween the time of the patients earliestsymptoms and the making of the firstroentgen examination showing the actualstructural relations. This may be followedby other plates at intervals, if symptoms in-dicate, so that increased displacement may


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