A treatise on dislocations and on fractures of the joints . /^y>lu-ked dyJs/2ev Co(7prj-. f<f^-f. PLATE XXXm. Fig. the radius of a dog, from which half an inch of bonehad been removed. It had not united, but, from the appear-ance of the callus, probably would have united had the animallived longer than two months. A A. Space produced by the removal of the bone. Fig. of the radius removed, an inch in length. Mode ofunion shewn. A A. Each end of the radius united with the ulna only. Fig. inches of the radius removed. A ligamentous unionof the radius to the ulna was


A treatise on dislocations and on fractures of the joints . /^y>lu-ked dyJs/2ev Co(7prj-. f<f^-f. PLATE XXXm. Fig. the radius of a dog, from which half an inch of bonehad been removed. It had not united, but, from the appear-ance of the callus, probably would have united had the animallived longer than two months. A A. Space produced by the removal of the bone. Fig. of the radius removed, an inch in length. Mode ofunion shewn. A A. Each end of the radius united with the ulna only. Fig. inches of the radius removed. A ligamentous unionof the radius to the ulna was produced, and the ulna wasenlarged opposite to the space produced by the removal ofthe radius. Fig. a curious result of an experiment in which an inch ofbone was removed from the radius, and the ulna was acci-dentally broken at the time. The radius produced callus, which did not reach from bone to bone, but the ulna, at itsfractured part, sent in two portions of bone to fill the spacebetween the ends of the radius. A A. Space between the ends of the


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, booksubjectfractures, booksubjectfracturesbone