The therapeutical applications of hydrozone and glycozone . Fig. 1. Fig. 2. Fig. 3- every case of joint disease, almost with the certainty of an unchangeable law. There isthen, in all joint diseases, a tendency of the flexor muscles to contract, while the ex-tensors, if not in absolute relaxation, do not, at all events, retract such action. It is true that the flexors are probably, in the limbs, strongerthan the extensors,but in fact a mere examination will show that on the flexor side muscles are rigid and onthe opposite side flaccid. Our knowledge is as yet insufficient to account for thephe


The therapeutical applications of hydrozone and glycozone . Fig. 1. Fig. 2. Fig. 3- every case of joint disease, almost with the certainty of an unchangeable law. There isthen, in all joint diseases, a tendency of the flexor muscles to contract, while the ex-tensors, if not in absolute relaxation, do not, at all events, retract such action. It is true that the flexors are probably, in the limbs, strongerthan the extensors,but in fact a mere examination will show that on the flexor side muscles are rigid and onthe opposite side flaccid. Our knowledge is as yet insufficient to account for thephenomenon. We will consider these statements later. The experiments of the Germans and ofEdwin Owen, of London, England, demonstrated that the joint, when forcibly injected * Barweli, p. 106. Woods Library, 1881. 131 from within the pelvis, produced eversion, flexion and abduction of the limb and im-mobilization of the joint. — Sayre concludes from these experiments, that effusions are always present in jointsdiseased, that the intra-capsular hydraulic pr


Size: 1254px × 1993px
Photo credit: © The Reading Room / Alamy / Afripics
License: Licensed
Model Released: No

Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1900, bookpublishernewyork, bookyear19