. A practical treatise on fractures and dislocations. et it wTas freely movable andwas covered with articular carti-lage. In Stanskis the Y-liga-ment had been completely trans-formed into bone, and the headof the femur lay near the tuber-osity of the ischium, the limbbeing much flexed and SSdillots the head of thefemur was atrophied and ir-regular, but the limb was soserviceable that the patient wasa professional soldier, and sharedin all the campaigns of the upon the cadaver corroborate the clinical and post- 1 Treub : Centralblatt fiir Chirurgie, 1882, p. 729. 2
. A practical treatise on fractures and dislocations. et it wTas freely movable andwas covered with articular carti-lage. In Stanskis the Y-liga-ment had been completely trans-formed into bone, and the headof the femur lay near the tuber-osity of the ischium, the limbbeing much flexed and SSdillots the head of thefemur was atrophied and ir-regular, but the limb was soserviceable that the patient wasa professional soldier, and sharedin all the campaigns of the upon the cadaver corroborate the clinical and post- 1 Treub : Centralblatt fiir Chirurgie, 1882, p. 729. 2 Verhaeghe, Gazette des Hopitaux, 1851, p. 283 ; Schinzinger, Wiener med. Presse,1880, No. 3, quoted by Poinsot; Curling, Medical Times and Gazette, 1853, vol. ii. ; Duboue, Bull, de la Societe Anatomique, 1858, p. 496; Annandale, British MedicalJournal, 1870, vol. i. p. 101. 3 Bolton : Annals of Surgery, October, 1902, p. 586. 4 Werner: Beitrage zur klin. Chir., vol. xli. 6 Cooper: Loc. cit., p. 50. 6 Sedillot: Gazette des Hopitaux, 1861, p. 94. Obturator dislocation. (Bigelow.) THYROID DISLOCATIONS OF THE HIP. 7 17 mortem data concerning l>otli the p:ifhology jhk! the mode of produc-tion. If the dislocation is produced by abduction of the extendedlimb the rent in the capsule Is found to lie on the inner side of thejoint, while, when it is produced by abduction and outward rotationfollowing flexion, or by transformation of a primary dorsal dislocation,the rent is mainly on the under side, and its extension in front andupward is effected by secondary displacement of the head. TheY-ligament, remaining untorn, keeps the limb partly flexed, abducted,and everted, the head of the femur rests against the inner and lower sideof the acetabulum, and is prevented from rising by its pressure againslthis part of the bone and by the untorn portion of the capsule above. A case of compound dislocation has been quoted in Chapter LI. in a case reported by Cooke1 the shaft of the femur wa
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