Clinical memoirs on the diseases of women . eritonitis, and which is repre-sented in Fig. 9, is rarely simple; it is almost constantly asso-ciated with a slight inclination of the fundus backwards, togetherwuth some rotation of the organ on its axis which carries forwardsthe corresponding border of the tumour. In Fig. 10, the cervix, instead of behig pushed away by tlietumour, seems drawn into the affected cul-de-sac; which, in this case,is deeper than that of the healthy side, and seems narrower below,so as to widen a little at the junction of the cervix with the body ofthe uterus, where we g


Clinical memoirs on the diseases of women . eritonitis, and which is repre-sented in Fig. 9, is rarely simple; it is almost constantly asso-ciated with a slight inclination of the fundus backwards, togetherwuth some rotation of the organ on its axis which carries forwardsthe corresponding border of the tumour. In Fig. 10, the cervix, instead of behig pushed away by tlietumour, seems drawn into the affected cul-de-sac; which, in this case,is deeper than that of the healthy side, and seems narrower below,so as to widen a little at the junction of the cervix with the body ofthe uterus, where we generally find the peritoneal induration, byits exclusive action on the body of the uterus pushes it towardsthe healthy iliac fossa {vide Case XV.) It must be understood that the displacements just described are SYMPTOMATOLOGY 83 those witnessed in spurious pcri-uterinc l;itero-[)lilegmons, whichare bjfar the most frequent, especially if \vc include under this namethose which occupy the three posterior quarters of one of the lateralFig. Fig. n.


Size: 1195px × 2091px
Photo credit: © The Reading Room / Alamy / Afripics
License: Licensed
Model Released: No

Keywords: ., bookauthorbern, bookcentury1800, bookdecade1860, booksubjectwomen