second cervical vertebra from the inter- vertebral substance without displacement, i. 535; Lawrence's case of complete dis- location of the fourth from the fifth cer- vical vertebra, i. 535; Schuh's case of par- tial dislocation, i. 536; Lawrence on the occurrence of dislocation of the vertebræ, specially in the neck, i. 536; period at which death occurs after fracture and dis- placement of the vertebræ. i. 536; Astley Cooper says fracture with displacement above the fourth cervical vertebra imme- diately fatal, i. 536; this not always the case, i. 536; formation of a false joint in fracture of the spine, i. 537; instances of partial union by ossification in fractured spine, i. 537; Astley Cooper and Brodie on softening of the spinal cord after a severe blow, i. 537; diagnosis, i. 537; treatment general and local, i. 537; South on the treatment of fracture of the spinous processes, i. 538; South and Brodie on the attempt to set a fracture through the body of a vertebra, i. 538; Hardwicke's case, i. 538; South on the treatment of fractured spine, i. 538; treatment of fractured vertebræ with impression, i. 538; the operation of trepanning the spine performed by Cline jun., Wick- ham, Attenburrow, Tyrrell, Holscher, Smith, and Rogers, i. 538; Charles Bell, Astley Cooper, and Jaeger's opinions re- specting this operation, i. 538, 540, 541; Cline's jun. case of trepanning the spine, i. 539; Cline's jun. clinical observations on the case, i. 539; Abernethy and Brodie on the operation of trepanning the spine, i. 541 objections to the operation, i. 541; South's description of the operation, i. 542; South on the after-treatment, i. 542; Knox's spine-bed, i. 542; fracture of the pelvic bones, i. 543; of rare occurrence, and always the result of very great vio- lence, i. 543; fracture of the sacrum (rump-bone), i. 543; diagnosis difficult, when the upper part of the bone is broken, because no displacement, i. 543; reduc- tion of fracture of the lower part of the bone, i. 543; subsequent treatment, i. 543; South mentions a preparation of vertical fracture of the sacrum in the College Museum, i. 543; fracture of the coccyx rare, and generally in old persons, i. 543; treatment, i. 543; South on fracture of the coccyx, i. 543; fracture of the ilium or hip-bone, i. 544; direction of the fracture, and attendant injury to the soft parts, etc., i. 544; South on fractures of the hip-bone, and their danger from rupture of the bladder, i 544; diagnosis of fracture of the hip, share, or haunch- bone, i. 544; South on the diagnosis of fracture of the hip-bone, i. 544; Houston's case of fracture of the haunch-bone fol-
lowed by abscess in the perineum and urinary fistulæ, i. 545; subsequent treat- ment, i. 545; fracture of the breast-bone (sternum), i. 545; of rare occurrence, i. 545; causes and direction, i. 545; conse- quences of the displacement of the frac- tured portions, i. 545; diagnosis, i. 545; treatment, i. 545; Charles Bell's objection to laying open the fracture and using the elevator, or removing its edge by the lenticular, in order to raise the depressed portion, i. 546; Dupuytren and Günther's mode of treatment, i. 546; general treat- ment, i. 546; South on the impropriety of any operation to raise the depressed portion of bone, i. 546; fracture of the ribs, i. 546; causes, direction, and conse- quences, i. 546; case of fractured rib caused by severe cough, i. 546; South's case of wound of the heart caused by a broken rib, i. 546; diagnosis, i. 547; local and general treatment, i. 547; Graefe, Larrey, Seutin, Malgaigne, and Baillie on the local treatment of fractured ribs, i. 547; South on the treatment of fractured ribs, i. 547; fracture of the cartilages of the ribs, i. 547; diagnosis, i. 548; setting and treatment, i. 548; frac ture of the shoulder blade (scapula), i. 548; parts liable to be broken, i. 548; South on the causes of fracture of those parts, i. 548; fracture of the acromion, i. 548; symptoms and treatment, i. 548; South on the symptoms of fracture of the acromion, i. 548: fracture of the neck of the scapula, i. 548; diagnosis, i. 549; South doubts the occurrence of this frac- ture, i. 549; fracture of the coracoid pro- cess, i. 549; South's case, i. 549; fracture of the body of the scapula, i. 549; symp- toms and treatment, i. 549; fracture of the lower angle of the scapula, i. 549; treatment, i. 549; South on fracture of the body, spine, and angle of the scapula, i. 549; treatment of compound fracture of the scapula, i. 549; fracture of the collar- bone (clavicle), i. 550; situation and causes of fracture, i. 550; fracture of the clavicle between its sternal end and the coracoid process, i. 550; diagnosis, i. 550; trans- verse and oblique fractures, i. 550; setting the fracture, i. 550; deformity generally the result of this fracture, i. 550; mode of reducing the fracture, i. 551; the ban- dages and apparatus of Galen, Paré, Petit, Kluge, Richter, Heister, Brasdor, Evers, Brünninghausen, Wilhelm, Eberl, De- sault, Boyer, Brefeld, Eichheimer, Kop- penstædter, Keckely, Cruveilhier, Laserre, Flammant, Delpech, H. Earle, Amesbury, Richerand, Wattmann, Mayor, Huber- thal, and Rénaud, i. 551; objections to the apparatus of Heister, Brasdor, Evers, Brünninghausen, and Wilhelm, i. 551;
the apparatus of Desault and Boyer pre- ferable, i. 551; Dupuytren, Cloquet, Sa- lamon, and Jaeger's practice, i. 552; the preference given to Brefeld's apparatus, i. 552; South on the treatment of fractured clavicle, i. 552; application of the appa- ratus, i. 552; fracture of the clavicle be- tween the coracoid process and the scapular end, i. 553; diagnosis and treatment, i. 553; fracture of the upper-arm (humerus), i. 553; fracture of the neck of the bone, i. 553; diagnosis, i. 553; causes, i. 553; South on fracture of the greater tubercle, i. 553; Astley Cooper on fracture at the anatomical neck of the humerus, i. 553; South's cases, i. 554; Astley Cooper and South on fracture of the surgical neck, i. 554; setting and treatment of the frac- ture, i. 554; Richerand's plan of treat- ment, i. 554; condemned by South, i. 555; fracture of the body of the bone, i. 555; "situations in which it may occur, i. 555; diagnosis, i. 555; occasional results, i. 555; setting the fracture, i. 555; treat- ment, i. 555; South on the treatment of fracture of the humerus, i. 556; Seutin and Dupuytren's plan, i. 556; separation of the condyles in fracture of the lower end of the bone, i. 556; symptoms, diag- nosis, and treatment, i. 556; Astley Cooper on the union of these fractures, i. 557; South on fracture of the condyles, i. 557; compound fractures of the hu- merus, i. 557; South on the treatment of compound fractures of the humerus, i. 557; fracture of the bones of the fore-arm, i. 557; fracture of the radius alone, i. 557; symptoms and diagnosis, i. 557; symp- toms of displacement of the fractured ends, i. 557; Dupuytren and Brodie on fracture of the lower end of the radius, i. 558; South on fracture of the neck of the radius, i. 558; fracture of the ulna, i. 559; causes and symptoms, i. 559; frac- ture of both bones of the fore-arm, i. 559; situation, causes, and symptoms, i. 559; setting the fracture, i. 559; treatment, i. 559; setting a fracture of the radius or ulna alone, i. 559; Dupuytren on the treatment of fracture of either bone near the wrist, i. 559; Blandin's treatment, i. 560; South on the treatment of fractures of the fore-arm, i. 560; treatment of compound fracture of the fore-arm, i. 560; fracture of the olecranon, i. 560; causes and symptoms, i. 560; mode of union of the fractured ends, i. 560; treatment of the fracture by the apparatus of Böttcher, Wardenburg, Astley Cooper, and Ames- bury, i. 560; plan of treatment recom- mended by Duverney, Sheldon, Desault, Feiler, and Earle, i. 560, 561; descrip- tion of Feiler and Earle's apparatus, i. 561; South on the treatment of fracture
of the olecranon, i. 561; fracture of the coronoid process of the ulna, i. 561; first described by Astley Cooper, i. 561; treat- ment, i. 562; union takes place by liga- ment, i. 562; Jaeger's case of imperfect fracture of the coronoid process, i. 562; fractures of the bones of the hand, i. 562; fracture of the bones of the wrist, i. 562; causes, symptoms, treatment, and results, i. 562; fracture of the bones of the meta- carpus, i. 562; causes, symptoms, and treatment, i. 562; fracture of the pha- langes, i. 562; treatment, i. 562; frac- ture of the femur, i. 562; of the neck of the femur, i. 563; situation and direction, i. 563; causes, i. 563; symptoms of frac ture of the neck of the femur, i. 563; Astley Cooper on the distinction between fracture within and without the capsular ligament, i. 564; Earle, Smith, Ekl, and Fricke on some of the signs of this frac- ture, i. 564; Desault, Delpech, Astley Cooper, Ekl, Fricke, Hahn, Jaeger, and South on the in-locking of the broken ends of the bone, i. 564; Paré, Petit, Louis, Desault, Dessaussoy, and Delpech on the rotation of the foot outwards, i. 564; Guthrie, Syme, Stanley, Dupuytren, Astley Cooper, Mercier, Larrey, and Del- pech on inversion of the foot, i. 565; diagnosis, i. 565; separation of the head of the femur from its neck from external violence, i. 565; South's case, i. 565; fracture of the neck of the femur dis- tinguished from severe contusion of the hip-joint, i. 565; from dislocation of the femur outwards and upwards, and out- wards and downwards, i. 566; from dis- location upwards and inwards, i. 566; Astley Cooper and Gulliver on intersti- tial absorption in the neck of the femur, i. 566; opinions of surgeons on the prog- nosis in fracture of the neck of the femur, i. 566; Astley Cooper admits bony union in fractures external to, but not in frac- tures internal to, the capsular ligament, i. 566; Boyer and Earle opposed to his views, i. 566; bony union may take place within the capsular ligament, i. 567; causes of the non-union by bone in frac- ture of the neck of the femur, i. 567; Soëmmering and South's preparations of fracture within the capsular ligament united by callus, i. 567; Cruveilhier on the production of callus, i. 567; Swan and Stanley's cases of fracture of the neck of the femur within the capsule united by bone, i. 567; setting the fracture, i. 568; arrangement of the bed in fractures of the lower extremities, i. 568; various apparatus for fixing the broken ends of the bone, i. 568; apparatus of Paré, Sabatier, Guyot, Hildanus, La Faye, Ar- naud, Duverney, Hedenus, Théden, Bött-
cher, Bernstein, Larrey, Desault, Van Houte, Volpe, Josse, Meyer, Physick, Houston, Alban, Gressley, Brünning- hausen, Boyer, Heyne, Hagedorn, Dzondi, Nicolai, Klein, Gibson, Beck, Schür- mayer, Weckert, and Sauter, i. 569, 570; Mursinna, Dupuytren, Richerand, and Astley Cooper on the treatment of these fractures, i. 570; fracture-beds of Earle, Amesbury, Smith, Koppenstædter, and Hager, i. 571; the preference given to Hagedorn's apparatus, i. 571; Dupuytren on the advantages of the double inclined position, i. 571; subsequent treatment, i. 571; Dupuytren on the duration of the treatment, i. 571; oblique fracture of the femur through the great trochanter, i. 571; symptoms, i. 572; Astley Cooper's band- age for the treatment of this fracture, i. 572; fracture of the femur below the great trochanter, i. 572; seat, causes, and direc- tion, i. 572; signs, i. 572; these fractures always a severe accident, and generally cured with deformity and shortening, i. 573; South on simple and compound fractures of the femur, i. 573; the con- tentive apparatus with splints and limb in a straight direction, i. 573; South on the treatment of fracture of the femur, i. 573; the apparatus with splints, with the limb bent, and the patient lying on the side or back, i. 574; Pott, C. Bell, and Astley Cooper on the bent position, i. 574; Desault, Brünninghausen, Boyer, Hagedorn, and Sauter on permanent ex- tension, i. 574; Earle's fracture-bed, Granger's apparatus, and Mojsisovic's equilibrium plan, i. 574; application of Seutin's permanent apparatus, i. 575; treatment of transverse fractures of the middle of the femur, i. 575; of the upper and lower thirds, i. 575; of oblique frac- ture, i. 575; of compound fracture, i. 576; of fracture of the femur in children, i. 576; after-treatment, i. 576; fracture of the condyles, i. 576; symptoms and treatment, i. 576; fracture of patella (knee- | cap), i. 576; direction, nature, and causes, i. 577; diagnosis, i. 577; union of the fractured portions by a fibrous inter-sub- stance, i. 577; complication of the frac- ture with severe bruising or wound of the joint, i. 577; Gulliver on the union of fractured patella, i. 577; treatment of transverse fracture, i. 578; application of bandages round the joint, when there is considerable separation of the broken pieces, i. 578; Langenbeck and South on the treatment of fractured patella, i. 578; bandages and apparatus of Bucking, Evers, Mohrenheim, B. Bell, Boyer, A. Cooper, Baillif, and Fest, i. 579; treat- ment of the attendant inflammation, i. 579; subsequent treatment, i. 579; con- sequences of the injury, i. 579; John
Hunter on the processes which follow after union has taken place, i. 579; South on the means to be adopted for the adapta- tion of the rectus muscle to the new condition of the patella, i. 579; treatment of longitudinal fracture, i. 580; of splin- tered and compound fracture, i. 580; South on compound fracture of the pa- tella, i. 580; rupture of the ligament of the patella, i. 580; treatment, i. 580; great care required in the application of the apparatus for transverse fracture, i. 580; fracture of the bones of the leg, i. 580; causes, i. 580; fracture of the tibia, i. 581; direction, diagnosis and treatment, i. 581; fracture of the fibula, i. 581; causes and seat of the fracture, i. 581; symptoms, i. 581; frequently accom- panied with dislocation inwards of the tibia, i. 581; symptoms of the dislocation, i. 581; treatment of simple fracture, i. 581; fracture of both bones of the leg, i. 582; direction and situation of the frac- ture, i. 582; diagnosis, i. 582; treatment of simple transverse fracture, i. 582; of oblique fracture, i. 582; Posch and Sau- ter's apparatus for permanent extension, i. 583; treatment of fracture of the leg near the knee-joint, i. 583; compound fracture and its treatment, i. 583; Braun's apparatus, i. 583; Seutin's permanent apparatus for fracture of the leg, i. 583; South on the treatment of fracture of the bones of the leg, i. 583; fracture of the bones of the foot, i. 584; of rare occurrence, i. 584; generally caused by immediate vio- lence, i. 584; fracture of the os calcis, i. 585; causes and diagnosis, i. 585; signs, i. 585; if the periosteum be completely torn, great displacement may ensue, i. 585; setting the fracture, i. 585; Lawrence's case of fracture of the os calcis, i. 585; Lisfranc's case, i. 585; South's case of compound fracture of the os calcis, i. 585; South on fracture of the phalanges and on the treatment, i. 586. FRANC's operation for varicocele, ii. 297. FRANCO on the application of caustic for the radical cure of hernia, ii. 24; on ligature of the hernial sac for its radical cure, ii. 24; on the operation of dilating the ab- dominal ring, the hernial sac being un- opened, ii. 43.
FRANZ' case of apparent strangulated thy- roid rupture, ii. 88. FRAZER, Dr., recommends the removal of the acromion and glenoid cavity in ampu- tation at the shoulder-joint, ii. 960. FREER on compression in the treatment of aneurism, ii. 210; case of ligature of the external iliac in the groin, ii. 259; case of operation for artificial anus at the lower end of the colon, ii. 329. FREITAG on ligature of the hernial sac for its radical cure, ii. 24.
FRICKE'S plan for treating burns with a solution of lunar caustic, i. 112; on com- pression in orchitis, i. 182; the advan- tages of compression, i. 184; method of examining the length of the limb during the progress of hip disease, i. 253; ex- planation of the shortening of the limb incorrect, i. 256; explanation of the lengthening of the limb, i. 257; on the distinction between coxalgy and coxar- throcacy, i. 262; Scott's plan of treatment employed with advantage, i. 264; on the treatment of coxalgy, i. 267; case of the reduction of the consecutive dislocation, i. 268; on the torsion of arteries, i. 308; on the mode of practising torsion, i. 309; on the effects of torsion, i. 311; on the torsion of bony vessels, i. 311; on the treatment of severe wounds of the neck, i. 433; on some of the signs of fracture of the neck of the femur, i. 564; on the in- locking of the ends of the broken bone, i. 564; successful operation for sawing off the ends of the broken bone in false joints, i. 594; on the treatment of buboes, i. 659; on the treatment of caries, i. 686; on the operation of episioraphy, ii. 114; operation for varicocele, ii. 297; on ex- cision of the head of the metatarsus, ii. 985.
FRIEDERICH on the proximate cause of teta- nus, i. 378.
FRITZ on the mercurial treatment in hip disease, i. 267.
FRIEMANN on suture of the urethral fistula, i. 741.
FRORIEP, VON, on the proximate cause of tetanus, i. 378; on the causes of splay- foot, ii. 186; on ligature of the femoral below Poupart's ligament, ii. 262; on the application of caustic in varix, ii. 292. FROST-BITE :—definition of frost-bite, i. 125; South on the parallelism of the effects of great degrees of heat and cold upon the animal body, i. 125; Müller's comparison of the effects of heat and cold on the body, i. 126; Hunter's experiments in freezing rabbits' ears, i. 126; case of a soldier, whose scrotum was frost-bitten, i. 126; cold wet sufficient to induce mor- tification, if continued sufficiently long to reduce the natural heat of the part below a certain standard, i. 126; Sir Joseph Banks' account of his sufferings, and of Dr. Solander's from exposure to cold, i. 126; Dr. Kellie's case, i. 126; effects of frost-bite on a limb, i. 126; Hunter, Astley Cooper, and Larrey on the effects of frost-bite, i. 127; Green and Solly's cases of frost-bite, i. 127; consequences of too suddenly warming a frozen or be- numbed part,-chilblains, or gangrene, i. 129; Astley Cooper and Larrey's obser- vations on this point, i. 130; directions to re-animate a frozen person, i. 130; direc-
tions for thawing a frozen limb, i. 130; treatment of a part in which mortification is threatened, from its having been too hastily warmed, i. 130; when mortifica- tion has taken place, it must be treated in the usual manner, i. 130; chilblains, i. 130; symptoms and results, i. 130; Hunter mentions another inflammation very like chilblains, i. 131; seat of chil- blains, i. 131; treatment, i. 131; South on the mustard liniment in their treat- ment, i. 131; treatment of ulcerated chil- blains, i. 131; of gangrenous chilblains, i. 131; prevention of chilblains, i. 131. FURUNCLE. See Boil.
GADERMANN on the operation for strangu- lated thyroid rupture, ii. 89. GAETANI Bey's case of resection of the scapula, and acromial end of the clavicle, ii. 1005.
GAIRDNER, Dr., on the dangerous symp- toms occasionally caused by iodine, ii. 661. GALE on the use of the ligature for wound- ed vessels, i. 320; on the dressing of wounds, i. 324; on the application of the interrupted suture, i. 328.
GALEN on the removal of the relaxed uvula by cutting, i. 147; on the torsion of ar- teries, i. 308; on the protraction of the period of incubation of hydrophobia, i. 366; bandage for fractured clavicle, i. 551; on aneurism, ii. 197; on the appli- cation of two ligatures in aneurism, and the division of the artery between them, ii. 222; on aneurismal varix, ii. 269. GALENZOWSKI's modification of the German operation of rhinoplasty, ii. 843. GALE's experiment with the itch-mite, i.
GALL's case of spina bifida, ii. 465. Gall-bladder, wounds of, i. 479. Ganglions, ii. 699.
Gangrene, senile. See Mortification. Hos- pital Gangrene. See Mortification. GARENGEOT first formed four varieties of whitlow, i. 192; on agnails as a cause of whitlow, i. 195; on the operation of di- lating the abdominal ring, the hernial sac being unopened, ii. 43; mode of amputating at the shoulder-joint, ii. 956. Gastrotomy, ii. 391, 444. Gatesden's, JOHN of, Rosa Anglicana, i.
GAUSSIL on hydrocele caused by gonorrhea, ii. 498.
GEDDING'S, Dr., cases in which episioraphy was performed, ii. 114. GENDRIN'S account of the steps by which the stagnation of the blood in inflammation is produced, i. 29; on the nature of the cores of boils, i. 132; never found any trace of inflammation in cartilage, ii. 236; case of strictured œsophagus commu- nicating with the trachea, ii. 320; on the
physical characters of dropsy of the peri- | cardium, ii. 479; directions for the extir- pation of the womb, ii. 828. GENSOUL'S modification of the operation for deficient columna narium, ii. 841; case of chiloplasty, to remedy a deformity caused by gangrene, ii. 841; doubts Dupuytren's cases of extirpation of the upper jaw, ii. 994; mode of operating in extirpation of the upper jaw, ii. 995; case of extirpa- tion of the superior maxillary bone, ii.
GERARD on the stanching the bleeding from an intercostal artery, i. 447. GERBER on the varieties of exudations after inflammation, i. 33; on the microscopical resemblance between the lymph-corpuscles and the exudation-corpuscles, i. 34; ac- count of the formation of pus, and the re- productive organization in suppurative wounds, i. 41; description of ichor, puri- form macus, and serous exudation, i. 44. GERDY on dislocation of the upper end of the radius forwards, i. 791; plan of in- healing a plug of skin for the radical cure of rupture, ii. 24; mode of operating, ii.
GIBSON, Dr., on the use of raw cotton in the treatment of burns, i. 114; his forceps for amputating the tonsils, i. 146; be- lieves the divisions of whitlow, except the first, to be arbitrary, i. 192; on the treat- ment of whitlow, i. 195; Perkins' plan tried without advantage, i. 196; perform- ance of Barton's operation for anchylosis, i. 247; on the fatal effects of the stings of bees and wasps, i. 351; apparatus for fracture of the neck of the femur, i. 570; on the formation of a false joint with a fibro- ligamentous capsule, and a lining mem- brane, i. 588; case of old dislocation of the humerus, in reducing which the axil- lary artery was ruptured, i. 786. GILBERT'S case of resection of the scapula and clavicle together, ii. 1004. Gleet. See Inflammation of the Urethra. GLISSON on the causes of club-foot, ii. 176. GLUGE on the microscopic characters of pus, i. 35; on the nature of medullary fungus, ii. 719.
Gluteal artery, ligature of, ii. 257. GMELIN'S chemical analysis of the fluid in ranula, ii. 406.
GODEFREY'S cases of anteversion of the womb reduced by position, ii. 147; case of Cæsarian section in which he sewed up the wound in the womb, ii. 442.
i. 272; Brodie on ulceration of the car- tilages of the knee, i. 273; Rainey on a peculiar degeneration of the cartilage in disease of the knee, i. 273; Brodie on scrofulous disease in the cancellated struc- ture of the bones of the knee, i. 274: pro- gress of caries, i. 274. WHITE SWEL- LING, i. 274; application of the term, i. 274; the disease very frequent in Great Britain, but rare in Italy, Vienna, and many other parts of Germany, i. 275; Russell and Gotz on the appearances of white swelling on dissection, i. 275; Ni- colai on the symptoms and progress of white swelling, i. 275; Nicolai on the anatomy of white swelling, i. 276; prog- nosis and treatment, i. 277. Gonorrhea. See Inflammation of the Ure- thra.
Gonorrheal rheumatism and ophthalmia, i.
GOOCH on the arrest of hemorrhage by na- ture, i. 297; quotes a case of wounded gall-bladder, i. 479; bandage for rup- tured tendo Achillis, i. 493; case of spasm of the platysma myoides cured by operation, ii. 156; mode of amputating by the circular incision, ii. 891.
GooD, Dr. MASON, mentions two kinds of inflammation of the parotid gland, i. 148 ; the parotid phlegmon, i. 148; abscess of the parotid gland sometimes of consider- able magnitude, i. 148; malignant variety of parotid phlegmon, i. 148; the malig- nant variety of mumps, i. 149; on the malignant degeneration of parotid phleg- mon, i. 149.
GOODLAD's objection to the term "hys- terical," as applied to certain affections of the joints, i. 250; on the local appli- cations in such affections, i. 250; on liga- ture of the carotid prior to the extirpation of the parotid, ii. 783. GOODSIR on the mucilaginous glands, i. 212; holds with Key in the deposit from the synovial membrane being the cause of ulceration in cartilage, i. 231; on the scrofulous disease of the cancellated tex- ture of the heads of bone, i. 239. GOTTER's opinions relative to the formation of pus, i. 35.
GOTTSCHALK on the treatment of varix, ii.
Gorz on the appearances of white swelling on dissection, i. 275.
GOULARD on the stanching the bleeding from an intercostal artery, i. 447.
GONALGIA, INFLAMMATION OF THE KNEE-GOYRAUD on retraction of the tendons of
JOINT, i. 271; symptoms and progress, i. 271; difference between rheumatic and scrofulous white swelling of the knee- joint, i. 271; post-mortem appearances, i. 272; South and Brodie on the diagnos- tic symptoms of the diseases of the knee,
the fingers, ii. 193; cases of subcutane- ous section for cartilaginous bodies in joints, ii. 710.
GRAEFE's artery-compressor, i. 299; case of fatal gunshot wound of the intercostal artery, i. 447; on the application of su-
« PreviousContinue » |