... parts, but do not, when tapped, give quite the usual sensation of being floated in a fluid, although there can be little doubt that some fluid is present. There is a distinct bulging to the inner and also to the outer sides of the joints, and this... Medical Times and Gazette - Página 1411868Vista completa - Acerca de este libro
| William Paul Swain - 1869 - 288 páginas
...in July, 1867. There was great distortion, and the joint swollen, and a sinus led down to bare bone. The head of the tibia was dislocated backwards and...outwards. There was great pain on pressing the knee. The joint was excised on August 3rd, the operation being a difficult one owing to the displacement.... | |
| John Eric Erichsen - 1873 - 952 páginas
...long and many of the flat bones are liable to this form of disease. It is most common, perhaps, at the lower end of the femur, and the head of the tibia ; in the head of the humerus, and tbc lower end of the radius ; in fact, in those portions of bone... | |
| Sir Frederick Treves - 1886 - 604 páginas
...They are found in the interior of bones, usually in the cancellous ends, and affect the lower jaw, the lower end of the femur, and the head of the tibia in preference to all other bones. They can usually be easily recognised by their peculiar colour and... | |
| William Johnson Walsham - 1887 - 688 páginas
...softening, and ulceration. Usual Seats. — (i) The bones, especially the phalanges of the fingers, the lower end of the femur, and the head of the tibia and humerus, and (2) the parotid gland. Enchondromata may also occur in the subcutaneous tissue and... | |
| George Edgeworth Fenwick, Thomas George Roddick, George Ross - 1888 - 800 páginas
...from a patient whose thigh had been amputated ten days after receiving a compound comminuted fracture of the lower end of the femur and the head of the tibia, opening the knee-joint. Extensive sloughing had occurred, and at the time of the operation the patient... | |
| 1897 - 406 páginas
...also to the outer sides of the joints, and this is increased in proportion to the amount of flexion. The lower end of the femur and the head of the tibia are enlarged in both limbs, the temperature of the overlying skin is raised, and there is slight redness.... | |
| Frederick Treves - 1892 - 596 páginas
...They are found in the interior of bones, usually in the cancellous ends, and affect the lower jaw, the lower end of the femur, and the head of the tibia in preference to all other bones. They can usually be easily recognised by their peculiar colour and... | |
| William Johnson Walsham - 1897 - 934 páginas
...ulceration. Usual scats. — The bones, especially the phalanges of the fingers and sometimes of the toes, the lower end of the femur, and the head of the tibia and humerus. Tumours containing cartilage also occur in the parotid ^land and testicle, but these tumours... | |
| 1897 - 408 páginas
...also to the outer sides of the joints, and this is increased in proportion to the amount of flexion. The lower end of the femur and the head of the tibia are enlarged in both limbs, the temperature of the overlying skin is raised, and there is slight redness.... | |
| 1888 - 454 páginas
...from a patient whose thigh had been ampulaled ten days after receiving a compound comminuted fraclure of the lower end of the femur and the head of the tibia, opening the knee-joint. Extensive sloughing had occurred, and at the time of the operation the patieni... | |
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