Practical electro-therapeutics and X-ray therapy - with chapters on phototherapy, X-ray in eye surgery, X-ray in dentistry, and medico-legal aspect of the X-ray (1912) (14756836132)
Zusammenfassung
Identifier: practicalelectro00mart (find matches)
Title: Practical electro-therapeutics and X-ray therapy : with chapters on phototherapy, X-ray in eye surgery, X-ray in dentistry, and medico-legal aspect of the X-ray
Year: 1912 (1910s)
Authors: Martin, James Madison, 1866-1947
Subjects: Electrotherapeutics X-rays Diagnosis, Radioscopic Eye Electric Stimulation Therapy X-Ray Therapy Ophthalmologic Surgical Procedures
Publisher: St. Louis : C.V. Mosby
Contributing Library: Francis A. Countway Library of Medicine
Digitizing Sponsor: Open Knowledge Commons and Harvard Medical School
Text Appearing Before Image:
Fig. 141.—Colles fracture. more pictures than are necessary to thoroughly illustrate our text.Wrist injuries are extremely important, and come next to the elbowin point of interest. Where there is the least doubt as to the exactstate of affairs, the x-ray will settle the question. 312 PRACTICAL ELECTRO-THERAPEUTICS AND X-RAY THERAPY Fractures of the radius near the wrist (Colles fractures) arevery common, and are very seldom complicated by displacementand fractures in the carpal bones, as seen in Fig. 138. Fig. 141 isa typical Colles fracture, in which the main fracture is a transverse
Text Appearing After Image:
Fig. 142.—Fracture of the radius two inches from the wrist. break in the radius, slightly more than 1 inch above the wrist. Thestyloid process of the ulna is also fractured. The epiphyseal linesare well marked, indicating the youth of the patient. In thesecases it seems that the line of injury would be at the epiphyseal X-RAY IN FRACTURES AND DISLOCATIONS 313 line, where a displacement of the epiphysis would take place, butsuch an occurrence seldom happens. In only a few of the manycases of fracture of the lower end of the radius in the youth seenby the author were there displacements of the epiphyses. In Fig. 142 the radius is fractured about 2 inches above its lowerarticular surface. This patient was 18 years old, and the radial-epiphyseal line was almost obliterated, while the epiphyseal line in