Amerikanische Röntgenzeitschrift (1897) (14754584854)

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Amerikanische Röntgenzeitschrift (1897) (14754584854)

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Identifier: americanxrayjour1418unse (find matches)
Title: American X-ray journal
Year: 1899 (1890s)
Authors:
Subjects: X-Rays Radiography
Publisher: St. Louis : American X-Ray Publishing Co.
Contributing Library: The College of Physicians of Philadelphia Historical Medical Library
Digitizing Sponsor: Open Knowledge Commons and the National Endowment for the Humanities



Text Appearing Before Image:
Plate III. Case II. Fracture of right tibia and fibula. Antero-posterior view. Silver wire was used to hold bones in had considerable pain during first two position. Wound closed with cat-gut days caused by the stretching of the sutures ; no drainage. Antiseptic dress- muscles ; it was relieved by moderate ing applied and limb put up in a plaster- doses of morphine. Plaster-of-paris of-Paris spica extending from foot to the removed at end of six weeks : primary 77//C AMERICAX X RAY JOCN.XAL. 519 union perfect ; bone firmly united. Thefollowing day the patient was allowedup and around on crutches, which wereused for about four weeks, when one patient revealed the fact that limb wasless than 2-8 of an inch short. At pres-ent the patient is walking to school one-half mile from his home.
Text Appearing After Image:
Plate IV. Case II, One-half anterior and external view- crutch only was used for two weeks.Twelve weeks after day of operation pa-tient was able to walk with almost per-fect gait, without support. Final meas-urements made the last time I saw the Case II. (Plates III.-VI.) Age 22years. Sustained fracture of both bonesof right leg, February 2, 189S. Cameunder my care April 28. Operation onApril 28, 1898. Anterior incision about 520 THE AMERICAN X-RAY JOURNAL. five inches long made parallel to crestof tibia and about y2 inch to outer side.Space between ends of bones filled withdense fibrous tissue. Transverse sec- together by a kangaroo-tendon suture.Wound was closed without drainage :antiseptic dressings applied and plaster-of-Paris case put on extending from the Medical Register. Plate V. Case II. Six weeks after operation, tion of ends of tibia made and when ap-proximated were held by a drill left inprojecting through the dressing. Thefracture of the fibula being an obliqueone, the ed

The American X-Ray Journal was the first radiology journal in the United States. Its first issue was published in May 1897, its founder and first editor was an American physician Heber Robarts (1852–1922), who took an early keen interest in the new Roentgen rays. Robarts was also a co-founder of the Roentgen Society of the United States, the forerunner of the American Roentgen Ray Society (ARRS). In its earliest days the journal struggled to attract any important articles as the majority of the pioneering researchers in the fledgling field of x-rays would prefer to see their work published in the established medical journals. The initial subscription rate for the new journal was one dollar per annum (payable in advance) or two dollars for overseas subscribers. Alternatively, it was ten cents per issue, or twenty cents for readers outside the US. In 1902, Harry Preston Pratt, an American physician from Chicago with an interest in electrotherapy, purchased the American X-Ray Journal from Dr Robarts. In 1904, the American X-Ray Journal subsumed the Archives of Electrology and Radiology (which had previously been the American Electro-Therapeutic and X-Ray Era). Following this, the journal was re-named and re-focussed as the American Journal of Progressive Therapeutics, and this published its last edition in January 1906.

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