. A practical treatise on fractures and dislocations . hich he hasnamed dislocation under the subscapularis mus-cle. The drawing which accompanies the report,made from the autopsy, sufficiently shows that itwas a dislocation of the same character which we are now Dr. Parker, of the same city, has called attention to a similarcase, an account of which was first given in Reeses edition of Coopers Surgical Dictionary. The head of thehumerus reposed in the By Malgaigne, Vidal (de Cas-sis), and others, this is called a subcora-coid dislocation, a term which, as be
. A practical treatise on fractures and dislocations . hich he hasnamed dislocation under the subscapularis mus-cle. The drawing which accompanies the report,made from the autopsy, sufficiently shows that itwas a dislocation of the same character which we are now Dr. Parker, of the same city, has called attention to a similarcase, an account of which was first given in Reeses edition of Coopers Surgical Dictionary. The head of thehumerus reposed in the By Malgaigne, Vidal (de Cas-sis), and others, this is called a subcora-coid dislocation, a term which, as beingmore distinctive and appropriate thaueither of the others, I shall choose toadopt. In the second variety (Fig. 280),the head, having escaped from under-neath the coracoid process, is madeto approach nearer to the sternum, soas to apply itself more or less closelyto the inferior edge of the clavicle. Inwhich case the head and neck will beplaced behind both the pectoralis majorand minor, and also behind the shorthead of the biceps and coraco-brachi-. Subcoracoid dislocation. Fig. 230.
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Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade1860, booksu, booksubjectfracturesbone