The Asclepion
Prof. Nancy Demand, Indiana University
- Bloomington
Hippocratic Treatise On Fractures
By Hippocrates (ca. 400 BCE)
Translated by Francis Adams
Part I
In treating fractures and dislocations,
the physician must take the extension as straight as possible,
for this is the most natural direction. But if it incline to
either side, it should rather turn to that of pronation, for
there is thus less harm than if it be toward supination. Those,
then, who act in such cases without deliberation, for the most
part do not fall into any great mistake, for the person who is
to have his arm bound, presents it in the proper position from
necessity, but physicians who fancy themselves learned in these
matters, are they who commit blunders. There is no necessity
of giving the longer directions on this subject, because I know
physicians who have the reputation of being skilled in giving
the proper position to the arm in binding it up, while in reality
they are only showing their own ignorance. But many other things
in our art are judged of in this manner, for people rather admire
what is new, although they do not know whether it be proper or
not, than what they are accustomed to, and know already to be
proper; and what is strange, they prefer to what is obvious.
I must now state what the mistakes of medical men are, which
I wish to unteach, and what instructions I have to say regarding
it, will apply to the other bones of the body.
Part 2
The arm, then, for that is the subject
we were treating of, was presented in the prone position to be
bound, but the physician forced his patient to hold it as the
archers do when they project the shoulder, and in this position
he bound it up, thinking within himself that he was acting according
to Nature, and in proof of this he pointed out that all the bones
in the fore-arm were thus in a straight line, and that the integuments
both inside and outside, were also in a straight line, and that
the flesh and nerves (tendons?) were thus put in their natural
position, and he appealed to what happens in archery, as a proof
of this. And so saying, and so doing, he is looked up to as a
sage; and yet he forgets that in all the other arts and performances,
whether executed whether executed by strength or dexterity, what
is reckoned the natural position is not the same, and that in
the same piece of work it may happen that the natural position
of the right arm is not the same as that of the left. For there
is one attitude in throwing the javelin, and another in slinging,
another in casting stones, another in boxing, and another in
a state of repose. And whatever arts one examines, it will be
found that the natural position of the arms is not the same in
each, but that in every case the arms are put into the attitude
which suits best with the instrument that is used, and the work
to be performed. In practicing archery, no doubt this is the
best attitude of the left arm, for gingly-moid extremity of the
humerus being fixed in the cavity of the ulna, in this position,
throws the bones of the forearm and arm into a line, as if they
constituted a single bone, and all flexion at the joint is revented
in this position. It is no doubt certain that the member is thus
put into the most unbending and extended position possible, so
as not to be overcome or yield when the string is drawn by the
right arm, and thus will the archer be enabled to draw the string
farthest, and discharge his arrow with the greatest force and
rapidity, for arrows thus discharged have the greatest swiftness
and force, and are carried to the greatest distances. But there
is nothing in common between the binding up of an arm and archery.
Moreover, if having thus bound up the arm, the physician direct
the patient to keep it thus, he will occasion him greater pain
than he had from the wound itself; and thus also, if the physician
order him to bend the arm, neither the bones, the nerves, nor
the flesh will any longer be in the same condition, but will
be arranged differently, having overcome the bandaging. What
use, then, is there of the archer's attitude? And these mistakes,
the physician, conceited in his knowledge, would probably not
have committed if he had allowed the patient himself to present
his arm.
Part 3
But another physician putting the arm into
the state of supination, gives orders to extend the arm thus,
and bandages it in this position, reckoning it the one according
to nature, judging thus from the skin, and also fancying the
bones to be thus in their natural position, because the bone
which protrudes at the wrist, where the little finger is, appears
to be in a line with the bone from which people measure the bone
of the fore-arm. These things he brings forward as proofs that
the parts are in their natural state, and he is supposed to speak
correctly. But, indeed, if the arm be kept stretched in a supine
position, it will become very painful, and this fact any one
may ascertain by extending his own arm in this attitude. And
also a weaker man grasping with his hands a stronger man whose
arm is turned in a supine position, could lead him wherever he
chose, and neither, if a man held a sword thus in his hand, could
he make any proper use of it, so constrained is this position.
And, moreover, if, when a physician has thus bound up the arm,
he allow it to remain in the same position, the patient will
endure greater pain if he walk about, but considerable, even
if he remain at rest. And thus, too, if he shall bend the arm,
the muscles and the bones must necessarily assume a different
position. But, in addition to other mischief, he is ignorant
of these facts regarding the position, that the bone which protrudes
at the wrist, close to the little finger, belongs to the fore-arm,
whereas the one at the joint, from which people measure the fore-arm,
is the head of the humerus. He fancies that both these belong
to the same bone, and many others are of this opinion. The latter,
in fact, is the same part as that which is called the elbow,
upon which we sometimes rest, and when he holds the arm thus
in a supine position, in the first place the bone appears distorted,
and in the next place the tendons which extend from the carpus
along the inner side and from the fingers become distorted while
the arm has a supine position; for these tendons proceed to the
bone of the humerus, from which the fore-arm is measured. Such,
and so many mistakes and marks of ignorance are committed, regarding
the natural construction of the arm. But if one will extend a
broken arm as I direct, he will turn the bone, situated at the
extremity of the little finger, into the straight line, and also
the one at the elbow, and the tendons which stretch from the
carpus to the extremity of the humerus will be placed in the
straight line; and when the arm is suspended in a sling, it will
be in the same attitude as that in which it was bound up, and
will give no pain to the patient when he walks about, nor when
he lies reclined, and will not become fatigued. The man should
be so seated that the prominent part of the bone may be turned
to the brightest light which is at hand, so that the operator
in making the extension, may be at no loss to discover if it
be sufficiently straight. The prominence of a broken bone could
not escape being detected by the hand of an experienced person,
when applied for this purpose, and, moreover, the projecting
part is particularly painful to the touch.
Part 4
In cases of fracture in either of the bones
of the forearm, it is easier to effect a cure if the upper bone
be broken, although it be the thicker one, both because the sound
bone is situated below, and forms a support to it, and because
the deformity is more easily concealed, there being a thick mass
of flesh on the upper side, except near to the wrist. But the
lower bone is without a covering of flesh, is not easily concealed,
and requires stronger extension. If it is not this bone, but
the other which is broken, a more feeble extension proves sufficient,
but if both be broken, a more powerful extension is required.
In the case of a young person I have known the extension made
more strong than was necessary, but in general the extension
made is less than what is required. And when they are extended,
the physician should apply the palms of the hands, and adjust
the fractured parts and then having rubbed the parts with cerate,
but not in large quantity so that the bandages may not come off,
it is to be bound up in this state, care being taken that the
hand be not lower than the elbow, but a little higher, so that
the blood do not flow toward the extremity, but may be determined
to the upper part; and then it is to be secured with the bandage,
the head of which is to be placed at the fracture, and the bandage
should impart firmness to the parts without occasioning strong
compression. When you have carried the bandage twice or thrice
round at the seat of the fracture, it is to be carried upward,
so that the afflux of blood into it may be stopped, and the bandage
should terminate there, and the first bandages ought not to be
long. The head of the second bandage is also to be placed upon
the seat of the fracture, and a single round of it being made
there, it is then to be carried downward, and is not to be applied
so tight as the other, and there should be greater distances
between the turns, so that the bandage may prove sufficient to
revert to the spot where the other terminated. The bandages may
be rolled to the left hand or to the right, or to whatever side
suits best with the position of the fractured arm, or according
to the inclination which it may have. Afterward we must place
along the arm, compresses, smeared with a little cerate, for
thus they occasion less uneasiness, and are more easily arranged.
And then we must apply the bandages crossways, sometimes to the
right hand, and sometimes to the left, for the most part beginning
below and terminating above, but sometimes commencing above and
ending below. The parts which are thinly covered with flesh should
be wrapped round with compresses, and inequalities should be
made up, not by a number of folds at once, but by degrees. Some
slack turns are also to be made around the wrist, to this side
and to that. These two bandages are sufficient at first.
Part 5
And these are the signs that the patient
has been well treated and properly bandaged: if you ask him if
the arm feels tight, and he says it does, but moderately so,
and especially about the fracture; and this reply he should make
all along, if the bandage be properly applied. And these are
symptoms of the bandaging being moderately tight; if for the
first day and night he fancies that the tightness does not diminish,
but rather increases; and if on the next day there be a soft
swelling in the hand, for this is a sign of moderate compression,
but at the end of the second day the compression should feel
less, and on the third day the bandaging should appear loose.
And if any of these symptoms be wanting, you may conclude that
the bandaging is slacker than it should be; or if any of these
symptoms be in excess, you may infer that the compression is
more than moderate; and judging from these, you will apply the
next bandages either slacker or tighter. Having removed the bandages
on the third day, you must make extension and adjust the fracture,
and bind it up again; and if the first bandaging was moderately
applied, the second bandaging should be made somewhat tighter.
The heads the bandages should be placed on the fractures as in
the former case; for, so doing, the humors will be driven to
the extremities, whereas if you bandage any other part beforehand,
the humors will he forced from it to the seat of the fracture:
it is of much importance that this should be properly understood.
Thus the bandaging and compression should always commence at
the seat of the fracture, and everything else should be conducted
on the same principle, so that the farther you proceed from the
fracture, the compression should always be the less. The bandages
should never be actually loose, but should be smoothly put on.
At each dressing the number of bandages should be increased;
and the patient, if asked, should answer, that he feels the bandages
somewhat tighter than on the former occasion, especially about
the fracture, and everything else in proportion; and with respect
to the swelling, the pain, and recovery, everything should proceed
as after the former dressing. But on the third day the outer
bandaging should appear looser. Then having removed the bandages,
you should bind it up again, somewhat tighter than before, and
with all the bandages which will be required on the occasion,
and afterwards one ought to experience the same train of symptoms
as at the former periods of bandaging.
Part 6
When the third day arrives, that is to
say, the seventh from the first dressing, if properly done, the
swelling in the hand should be not very great; and the part which
has been bandaged should be found more slender and less swelled
at each time, and on the seventh day the swelling should be quite
gone, and the broken bones should be more readily moved, and
admit of being easily adjusted. And if these things be so, you
should, after setting the fracture, apply the bandages so as
to suit the splints, and a little more tight than formerly, unless
there be more pain from the swelling in the hand. When you have
applied the bandages, you must adjust the splints all around
the limb, and secure them secure them with strings so loose as
just to keep them in their place, without the application of
the splints contributing at all to the compression of the arm.
After this the pain and recovery should proceed as in the preceding
periods of the bandaging. But if, on the third day, the patient
say that the bandaging is loose, you must then fasten the splints,
especially at the fracture, but also elsewhere, wherever the
bandaging is rather loose than tight. The splint should be thickest
where the fracture protrudes, but it should not be much more
so than elsewhere. Particular attention should be paid to the
line of the arm corresponding to the thumb, so that no splint
be laid on it, but upon each side of it, nor in the line of the
little finger where the bone is prominent at the wrist, but on
each side of it. And if it be found necessary that splints should
be applied in these directions at the seat of the fracture, they
should be made shorter than the others, so as that they may not
reach the bones which are prominent at the wrist, for otherwise
there is danger of ulceration, and of the tendons being laid
bare. The splints should be adjusted anew every third day, in
a very gentle manner, always keeping in mind that the object
of the splints is to maintain the lower bandages in their place,
and that they are not needed in order to contribute to the compression.
Part 7
If, then, you see that the bones are properly
adjusted by the first dressings, and that there is no troublesome
pruritus in the part, nor any reason to suspect ulceration, you
may allow the arm to remain bandaged in the splints until after
the lapse of more than twenty days. The bones of the fore-arm
generally get consolidated in thirty days altogether; but there
is nothing precise in this matter, for one constitution differs
from another, and one period of life from another. When you remove
the bandages, you must pour hot water on the arm and bind it
up again, but somewhat slacker, and with fewer bandages than
formerly: and again on the third day you undo the bandages, and
bind it still more loosely, and with still fewer bandages. And
if, while the arm is bound up in the splints, you should at any
time suspect that the bones do not lie properly, or if anything
about the bandages annoys the patient, you should loose them
at the middle of the time, or a little earlier, and apply them
again. A diet slightly restricted will be sufficient in those
cases in which there was no external wound at first, or when
the bone does not protrude; but one should live rather sparingly
until the tenth day, as being now deprived of exercise; and tender
articles of food should be used, such as moderately loosen the
bowels; but one should abstain altogether from flesh and wine,
and then by degrees resume a more nourishing diet. This diet.
may be laid down as a just rule in the treatment of fractures,
both as to how they should be treated, and what will be the results
of a proper plan of treatment; so that one may know, that if
things do not turn out thus, there has been some defect or excess
in the treatment. And in this simple plan of treatment it is
necessary to attend also to the following directions, which some
physicians pay little attention to, although, when improperly
executed, they are capable of marring the whole process of bandaging:
for if both the bones be broken, or the lower one only, and the
patient who has got his arm bandaged keep it slung in a shawl,
and that the shawl is particularly loose at the fracture, so
that the arm is not properly suspended at this end or that, in
this case the bone must necessarily be found distorted upwards;
whereas, when both bones are thus broken, if the arm recline
in the shawl at the wrist and elbow, but the rest of it be not
kept up, the bone in this case will be distorted to the lower
side. The greater part of the arm and the wrist of the hand should
therefore be equally suspended in a broad soft shawl.
Part 8
When the arm is broken, if one stretch
the fore-arm and adjust it while in this position, the muscle
of the arm will be bound while extended; but when the dressing
is over, and the patient bends his arm at the elbow, the muscle
of the arm will assume a different shape. The following, then,
is the most natural plan of setting the arm: having got a piece
of wood a cubit or somewhat less in length, like the handles
of spades, suspend it by means of a chain fastened to its extremities
at both ends; and having seated the man on some high object,
the arm is to be brought over, so that the armpit may rest on
the piece of wood, and the man can scarcely touch the seat, being
almost suspended; then having brought another seat, and placed
one or more leather pillows under the arm, so as to keep it a
moderate height while it is bent at a right angle, the best plan
is to put round the arm a broad and soft skin, or broad shawl,
and to hang some great weight to it, so as to produce moderate
extension; or otherwise, while the arm is in the position I have
described, a strong man is to take hold of it at the elbow and
pull it downward. But the physician standing erect, must perform
the proper manipulation, having the one foot on some pretty high
object, and adjusting the bone with the palms of his hands; and
it will readily be adjusted, for the extension is good if properly
applied. Then let him bind the arm, commencing at the fracture,
and do otherwise as directed above; let him put the same questions
and avail himself of the same signs to ascertain whether the
arm be moderately tight or not; and every third day let him bind
it anew and make it tighter; and on the seventh or ninth day
let him bind it up with splints, and leave it so until after
the lapse of more than thirty days. And if he suspect that the
bone is not lying properly, let him remove the bandages in the
interval, and having adjusted the arm, let him bind it up again.
The bone of the arm is generally consolidated in forty days.
When these are past, the dressing is to be removed, and fewer
and slacker bandages applied instead of it. The patient is to
be kept on a stricter diet, and for a longer space of time than
in the former case; and we must form our judgment of it from
the swelling in the hand, looking also to the strength of the
patient. This also should be known, that the arm is naturally
inclined outward; to this side, therefore, the distortion usually
takes place, if not properly treated; but indeed, all the other
bones are usually distorted during treatment for fracture to
that side to which they naturally incline. When, therefore, anything
of this kind is suspected, the arm is to be encircled in a broad
shawl, which is to be carried round the breast, and when the
patient goes to rest, a compress of many folds, or some such
thing, is to be folded and placed between the elbow and the side,
for thus the bending of the bone will be rectified, but care
must be taken lest it be inclined too much inwards.
Part 9
The human foot is composed of several small
bones like the hand. These bones therefore are scarcely ever
broken, unless the skin at the same time be wounded by some sharp
and heavy body. The treatment of stich injuries, therefore, will
be delivered under the head of wounds. But if any bone be moved
from its place, or a joint of the toes be luxated, or any of
the bones of the part called the tarsus be displaced, it must
be forced back again to its place as described with regard to
the hand; and is to be treated with cerate, compresses, and bandages,
like the fractures, with the exception of the splints; and is
to be secured tightly in the same way, and the bandages renewed
on the third day; and the patient thus bandaged should return
the same answers as in fractures, as to the bandages feeling
tight or slack. All these bones recover perfectly in twenty days,
except those that are connected with the bones of the leg, and
are in a line with them. It is advantageous to lie in bed during
the whole of this time; but the patients, thinking light of the
complaint, have not perseverance to do this, and they walk about
before they get well; wherefore many of these do not make a perfect
recovery. And often the pain puts them in mind of the injury;
and deservedly, for the feet sustain the weight of the whole
body. When, therefore, they walk about before they are whole,
the joints which have been luxated are cured incompletely; and,
on that account, while walking about, they have pains in the
leg from time to time.
Part 10
But those bones which are connected with
the bones of the legare larger than the others, and the cure
of them when luxuated is more protracted. The mode of treatment
then is the same; but we must use more bandages and more splints,
and the bandage is to be carried round to this side and to that,
and pressure is to be made as in the other cases, particularly
at the seat of the luxation, and the first circles of the bandages
are to be made there. And at each time the bandages are taken
off, much hot water is to be used, for in all injuries at joints
the affusion of hot water in large quantity is to be had recourse
to. And the same symptoms of compression and relaxation should
manifest themselves in the same times, as in the cases formerly
treated of, and the subsequent bandagings should be conducted
in like manner. These cases get completely well for the most
part in forty days, if the patients have resolution to keep their
bed; but if not, they are subjected to the complaints formerly
described, or still worse.
Part 11
In persons who jumping from any high object
pitch upon their heel with great force, the bones are separated,
and the veins pour forth their contents, owing to the contusion
of the flesh surrounding the bone, and hence a swelling and much
pain supervene. For this bone (os calcis) is not a small one,
protrudes beyond the line of the leg, and is connected with important
veins and tendons; for the back tendon of the leg is inserted
into this bone. Such cases are to be treated with cerate, and
with compresses and bandages; and hot water is to be used in
large quantity; and they require many bandages, which ought to
be particularly good and appropriate. And if the patient happen
to have a tender skin about the heel, nothing is to be done to
it; but if, as some have it, the skin be thick and hardened,
it is to be pared down smoothly and thinned, but without wounding
it. It is not everybody who can apply the bandage properly in
such cases; for if one shall bind the parts, as in other accidents
about the ankle, sometimes bringing a fold round the foot and
sometimes round the tendon, these turns leave out the heel, which
is the seat of the contusion, and thus there is danger that the
os calcis may sphacelate; and if this should take place, the
impediment may endure for life and also in all the other cases
of sphacelus, not proceeding from such a cause as this; as when,
from being carelessly allowed to lie in a certain position during
confinement to bed, the heel becomes black, or when a serious
wound has occurred in the leg and it is long of healing, and
is connected with the heel, or when the same thing happens in
the thigh, or when in any disease a protracted decubitus takes
place on the back, in all such cases the sores are inveterate,
troublesome, and frequently break out again, unless particular
attention be paid to the cure, along with much rest, as in all
the cases attended with sphacelus. And cases of sphacelus connected
with this cause, in addition to other inconveniences, are attended
with great danger to the whole body. For they are apt to be attended
with very acute fevers, of the continual type, accompanied with
tremblings, hiccup, aberration of intellect, and which prove
fatal within a few days: and there may be lividities of bloody
veins, with nausea, and gangrene from pressure; these diseases
may occur, besides the sphacelus. Those which have been described
are the most violent contusion; but in general the contusions
are mild, and no great care is required with regard to the treatment,
and yet it must be conducted properly. But when the contusion
appears to be severe, we must do as described above, making many
turns of the bandage around the heel, sometimes carrying it to
the extremity of the foot, sometimes to the middle, and sometimes
around the leg; and, in addition, all the surrounding parts are
to be bandaged in this direction and that, as formerly described;
and the compression should not be made strong, but we should
make use of many bandages, and it is better also to administer
hellebore the same day or on the morrow; and the bandages should
be removed on the third day and reapplied. And these are the
symptoms by which we discover whether the case will get worse
or not: when the extravasated blood, the lividities, and the
surrounding parts become red and hard, there is danger of an
exacerbation. But if there be no fever, we must give emetics,
as has been said, and administer the other remedies which are
applicable when the fever is not of a continual type; but if
continual fever be present, we must not give strong medicines,
but enjoin abstinence from solid food and soups, and give water
for drink, and not allow wine but oxyglyky (a composition from
vinegar and honey?). But if the case be not going to get worse,
the ecchymosed and livid parts, and those surrounding them become
greenish and not hard; for this is a satisfactory proof in all
cases of ecchymosis, that they are not to get worse; but when
lividity is complicated with hardness, there is danger that the
part may become blackened. And we must so manage the foot as
that it may be generally raised a little higher than the rest
of the body. Such a patient will get well in sixty days if he
keep quiet.
Part 12
The leg consists of two bones, of which
the one is much more slender than the other at one part, but
not much more slender at another. These are connected together
at the foot, and form a common epiphysis, but they are not united
together along the line of the leg;and at the thigh they are
united together and form an epiphysis, and this epiphysis has
a diaphysis; but the other bone in a line with the little toe
is a little longer. Such is the nature of the bones of the leg.
Part 13
Sometimes the bones connected with the
foot are displaced, sometimes both bones with their epiphysis;
sometimes the whole epiphysis is slightly moved, and sometimes
the other bone. These cases are less troublesome than the same
accidents at the wrist, if the patients will have resolution
to give them rest. The mode of treatment is the same as that
of the other, for the reduction is to be made, as of the other,
by means of extension, but greater force is required, as the
parts of the body concerned are stronger in this case. But, for
the most part, two men will be sufficient, by making extension
in opposite directions, but, not withstanding, if they are not
sufficiently strong, it is easy to make more powerful extension
in the following way: having fixed in the ground either the nave
of a wheel, or any such object, something soft is to be bound
round the foot, and then some broad thongs of ox-skin being brought
round it, the heads of the thongs are to be fastened to a pestle
or any other piece of wood, the end of which is to be inserted
into the nave, and it, the pestle, is to be pulled away, while
other persons make counter-extension by grasping the shoulders
and the ham. It is also sometimes necessary to secure the upper
extremity otherwise; this if you desire to effect, fasten deeply
in the ground a round, smooth piece of wood, and place the upper
extremity of the piece of wood at the perineum, so that it may
prevent the body from yielding to the pulling at the foot, and,
moreover, to prevent the leg while stretched, from inclining
downward; some person seated at his side should push back the
hip, so that the body may not turn round with the pulling, and
for this purpose, if you think fit, pieces of wood may be fastened
about the armpits on each side, and they are to be stretched
by the hands, and thus secured, while another person takes hold
of the limb at the knee, and aids in thus making counter-extension.
Or thus, if you prefer it: having bound other thongs of leather
about the limb, either at the knee, or around the thigh, and
having fastened another nave of a wheel in the ground above the
head, and adjusted the thongs piece of wood adapted to the nave,
extension may thus be made in the opposite direction to the feet.
Or if you choose, it may be done thus: instead of the naves,
lay a moderate-sized beam under the couch, and then having fastened
pieces of wood in this beam, both before and behind the head,
make counter-extension by means of thongs, or place windlasses
at this extremity and that, and make extension by means of them.
There are many other methods of making extension. But the best
thing is, for any physician who practices in a large city, to
have prepared a proper wooden machine, with all the mechanical
powers applicable in cases of fractures and dislocation, either
for making extension, or acting as a lever. For this purpose
it will be sufficient to possess a board in length, breadth,
and thickness, resembling the quadrangular threshing-boards made
of oak.
Part 14
When you have made proper extension, it
is easy reduce the joint, for the displaced bone is thus raised
into a line with the other. And the bones are to be adjusted
with the palms of the hands, pressing upon the projecting bone
with the one, and making counter-pressure below the ankle with
the other. When you have replaced the bones, you must apply the
bandages while the parts are upon the stretch, if you possibly
can; but if prevented by the thongs, you must loose them, and
make counter-extension until you get the bandages applied. The
bandage is to be applied in the manner formerly described, the
heads of the bandages being placed on the projecting part, and
the first turns made in like manner, and so also with regard
to the number of compresses and the compression; and turns of
the bandages are to be brought frequently round on this and on
that side of the ankle. But this joint must be bound more tight
at the first dressing than in the case of the hand. But when
you have applied the bandage, you must place the bandaged part
somewhat higher than the rest of the body, and in such a position
that the foot may hang as little as possible. The attenuation
of the body is to be made proportionate to the magnitude of the
luxation, for one luxation is to be a small, and another to a
great extent. But in general we must reduce more, and for a longer
time, in injuries about the legs, than in those about the hands;
for the former parts are larger and thicker than the latter,
and it is necessary that the body should be kept in a state of
rest, and in a ecumbent position. There is nothing to prevent
or require the limb to be bandaged anew on the third day. And
all the treatment otherwise is to be conducted in like manner,
as in the preceding cases. And if the patient have resolution
to lie quiet, forty days will be sufficient for this purpose,
if only the bones be properly reduced, but if he will not lie
quiet, he will not be able to use the limb with ease, and he
will find it necessary to wear a bandage for a long time. When
the bones are not properly replaced, but there has been some
defect in this respect, the hip, the thigh, and the leg become
wasted, and if the dislocation be inward, the external part of
the thigh is wasted, and vice versa. But for the most part the
dislocation is inward.
Part 15
And when both bones of the leg are broken
without a wound of the skin, stronger extension is required.
We may make extension by some of the methods formerly described,
provided the bones ride over one another to a considerable degree.
But extension by men is also sufficient, and for the most part
two strong men will suffice, by making extension and counterextension.
Extension must naturally be made straight in a line with the
leg and thigh, whether on account of a fracture of the bones
of the leg or of the thigh. And in both cases they are to be
bandaged while in a state of extension, for the same position
does not suit with the leg and the arm. For when the fractured
bones of the arm or fore-arm are bandaged, the fore-arm is suspended
in a sling, and if you bind them up while extended, the figures
of the fleshy parts will be changed in bending the arm at the
elbow, for the elbow cannot be kept long extended, since persons
are not in the custom of keeping the joint long in this form,
but in a bent position, and persons who have been wounded in
the arm, and are still able to walk about, require to have the
arm bent at the elbow-joint. But the leg, both in walking and
standing, is habitually extended, either completely or nearly
so, and is usually in a depending position from its construction,
and in order that it may bear the weight of the rest of the body.
Wherefore it readily bears to be extended when necessary, and
even when in bed the limb is often in this position. And when
wounded, necessity subdues the understanding, since the patients
become incapable of raising themselves up, so that they neither
think of bending the limb nor of getting up erect, but remain
lying in the same position. For these reasons, neither the same
position nor the same mode of bandaging applies to the arm and
to the leg. If, then, extension by means of men be sufficient,
we should not have recourse to any useless contrivances, for
it any useless contrivances, for it is absurd to employ mechanical
means when not required; but if extension by men be not sufficient,
you may use any of the mechanical powers which is suitable. When
sufficiently extended, it will be easy to adjust the bones and
bring them into their natural position, by straightening and
arranging them with the palms of the hand.
Part 16
When the parts are adjusted, you should
apply the bandages while the limb is in a stretched position,
making the first turns to the right or to the left, as may be
most suitable; and the end of the bandage should be placed over
the fracture, and the first turns made at that place; and then
the bandage should be carried up the leg, as described with regard
to the other fractures. But the bandages should be broader and
longer, and more numerous, in the case of the leg than in that
of the arm. And when it is bandaged it should be laid upon some
smooth and soft object, so that it may not be distorted to the
one side or the other, and that there may be no protrusion of
the bones either forward or backward; for this purpose nothing
is more convenient than a cushion, or something similar, either
of linen or wool, and not hard; it is to be made hollow along
its middle, and placed below the limb. With regard to the canals
(gutters?) usually placed below fractured legs, I am at a loss
whether to advise that they should be used or not. For they certainly
are beneficial, but not to the extent which those who use them
suppose. For the canals do not preserve the leg at rest as they
suppose; nor, when the rest of the body is turned to the one
side or the other, does the canal prevent the leg from following,
unless the patient himself pay attention; neither does the canal
prevent the limb from being moved without the body to the one
side or the other. And a board is an uncomfortable thing to have
the limb laid upon, unless something soft be placed above it.
But it is a very useful thing in making any subsequent arrangements
of the bed and in going to stool. A limb then may be well or
ill arranged with or without the canal. But the common people
have more confidence, and the surgeon is more likely to escape
blame, when the canal is placed under the limb, although it is
not secundum artem. For the limb should by all means lie straight
upon some level and soft object, since the bandaging must necessarily
be overcome by any distortion in the placing of the leg, whenever
or to whatever extent it may be inclined. The patient, when bandaged,
should return the same answers as formerly stated, for the bandaging
should be the same, and the same swellings should arise in the
extremities, and the slackening of the bandages in like manner,
and the new bandaging on the third day; and the bandaged part
should be found reduced in swelling; and the new bandagings should
be more tightly put on, and more pieces of cloth should be used;
and the bandages should be carried loosely about the foot, unless
the wound be near the knee. Extension should be made and the
bones adjusted at every new bandaging; for, if properly treated,
and if the swelling progress in a suitable manner, the bandaged
limb will have become more slender and attenuated, and the bones
will be more mobile, and yield more readily to extension. On
the seventh, the ninth, or the eleventh day, the splints should
be applied as described in treating of the other fractures. Attention
should be paid to the position of the splints about the ankles
and along the tendon of the foot which runs up the leg. The bones
of the leg get consolidated in forty days, if properly treated.
But if you suspect that anything is wanting to the proper arrangement
of the limb, or dread any ulceration, you should loose the bandages
in the interval, and having put everything right, apply them
again.
Part 17
But if the other bone (fibula?) of the
leg be broken, less powerful extension is required, and yet it
must not be neglected, nor be performed slovenly, more especially
at the first bandaging. For in all cases of fracture this object
should be attained then as quickly as possible. For when the
bandage is applied tight while the bones are not properly arranged,
the properly arranged, the part becomes more painful. The treatment
otherwise is the same.
Part 18
Of the bones of the leg, the inner one,
called the tibia, is the more troublesome to manage, and requires
the greater extension; and if the broken bones are not properly
arranged, it is impossible to conceal the distortion, for the
bone is exposed and wholly uncovered with flesh; and it is much
longer before patients can walk on the leg when this bone is
broken. But if the outer bone be broken, it causes much less
trouble, and the deformity, when the bones are not properly set,
is much more easily concealed, the bone being well covered with
flesh; and the patients speedily get on foot, for it is the inner
bone of the leg which supports the most of the weight of the
body. For along with the thigh, as being in a line with weight
thrown upon the thigh, the inner bone has more work to sustain;
inasmuch as it is the head of the thigh-bone which sustains the
upper part of the body, and it is on the inner and not on the
outer side of the thigh, being in a line with the tibia; and
the other half of the body approximates more to this line than
to the external one; and at the same time the inner bone is larger
than the outer, as in the fore-arm the bone in the line of the
little finger is the slenderer and longer. But in the joint of
the inferior extremity, the disposition of the longer bone is
not alike, for the elbow and the ham are bent differently. For
these reasons when the external bone is broken, the patients
can soon walk about; but in fractures of the inner, it is a long
time before they can walk.
Part 19
When the thigh-bone is broken, particular
pains should be taken with regard to the extension that it may
not be insufficient, for when excessive, no great harm results
from it. For, if one should bandage a limb while the extremities
of the bone are separated to a distance from one another by the
force of the extension, the bandaging will not keep them separate,
and so the bones will come together again as soon as the persons
stretching it let go their hold; for the fleshy parts (muscles?)
being thick and strong, are more powerful than the bandaging,
instead of being less so. In the case then which we are now treating
of, nothing should be omitted in order that the parts may be
properly distended and put in a straight line; for it is a great
disgrace and an injury to exhibit a shortened thigh. For the
arm, when shortened, might be concealed, and the mistake would
not be great; but a shortened thigh-bone would exhibit the man
maimed. For when the sound limb is placed beside it, being longer
than the other, it exposes the mistake, and therefore it would
be to the advantage of a person who would be improperly treated
that both his legs should be broken, rather than either of them;
for in this case the one would be of the same length as the other.
When, then, proper extension has been made, you must adjust the
parts with the palms of the hands, and bandage the limb in the
manner formerly described, placing the hands of the bandages
as was directed, and making the turns upward. And the patient
should return the same answers to the same questions as formerly,
should be pained and recover in like manner, and should have
the bandaging renewed in the same way; and the application of
the splints should be the same. The thigh-bone is consolidated
in forty days.
Part 20
But this also should be known, that the
thigh-bone is curved rather to the outside than to the inside,
and rather forward than backward; when not properly treated,
then, the distortions are in these directions; and the bone is
least covered with flesh at the same parts, so that the distortion
cannot be concealed. If, therefore, you suspect anything of this
kind, you should have recourse to the mechanical contrivances
recommended in distortion of the arm. And a few turns of the
bandage should be brought round by the hip and the loins, so
that the groin and the articulation near the perineum may be
included in the bandage; and moreover, it is expedient that the
extremities of the splints should not do mischief by being placed
on parts not covered with the bandages. The splints, in fact,
should be carefully kept off the naked parts at both ends; and
the arrangement of them should be so managed, as that they may
not be placed on the natural protuberances of the bone at the
knee-joint, nor on the tendon which is situated there.
Part 21
The swellings which arise in the ham, at
the foot, or in any other part from the pressure, should be well
wrapped in unscoured and carded wool, washed with wine and oil,
and anointed with cerate, before bandaging; and if the splints
give pain they should be slackened. You may sooner reduce the
swellings, by laying aside the splints, and applying plenty of
bandages to them, beginning from below and rolling upward; for
thus the swellings will be most speedily reduced, and the humors
be propelled to the parts above the former bandages. But this
form of bandaging must not be used unless there be danger of
vesications or blackening in the swelling, and nothing of the
kind occurs unless the fracture be bound too tight, or unless
the limb be allowed to hang, or it be rubbed with the hand, or
some other thing of an irritant nature be applied to the skin.
Part 22
More injury than good results from placing
below the thigh a canal which does not pass farther down than
the ham, for it neither prevents the body nor the leg from being
moved without the thigh. And it creates uneasiness by being brought
down to the ham, and has a tendency to produce what of all things
should be avoided, namely, flexion at the knee, for this completely
disturbs the bandages; and when the thigh and leg are bandaged,
if one bend the limb at the knee, the muscles necessarily assume
another shape, and the broken bones are also necessarily moved.
Every endeavor then should be made to keep the ham extended.
But it appears to me, that a canal which embraces the limb from
the nates to the foot is of use. And moreover, a shawl should
be put loosely round at the ham, along with the canal, as children
are swathed in bed; and then, if the thigh-bone gets displaced
either upward or to the side, it can be more easily kept in position
by this means along with the canal. The canal then should be
made so as to extend all along the limb or not used at all.
Part 23
The extremity of the heel should be particularly
attended to, so that it may be properly laid, both in fractures
of the leg and of the thigh. For if the foot be placed in a dependent
position, while the rest of the body is supported, the limb must
present a curved appearance at the forepart of the leg; and if
the heel be placed higher than is proper, and if the rest of
the leg be rather too low, the bone at the forepart of the leg
must present a hollow, more especially if the heel of the patient
be naturally large. But all the bones get consolidated more slowly,
if not laid properly, and if not kept steady in the same position,
and in this case the callus is more feeble.
Part 24
These things relate to cases in which there
is fracture of the bones without protrusion of the same or wound
of any other kind. In those cases in which the bones are simply
broken across, and are not comminuted, but protrude, if reduced
the same day or next, and secured in their place, and if there
be no reason to anticipate that any splintered bones will come
away; and in those in which the broken bones do not protrude,
nor is the mode of fracture such that there is reason to expect
the splinters will come out, some physicians heal the sores in
a way which neither does much good nor harm, by means of a cleansing
application, applying pitch ointment, or some of the dressings
for fresh wounds, or anything else which they are accustomed
to do, and binding above them compresses wetted with wine, or
greasy wool, or something else of the like nature. And when the
wounds become clean and are new healed, they endeavor to bind
up the limb with plenty of bandages, and keep it straight with
treatment does some good, and never much harm. The bones, however,
can never be equally well restored to their place, but the part
is a little more swelled than it should be; and the limb will
be somewhat shortened, provided both bones either of the leg
or fore-arm have been fractured.
Part 25
There are others who treat such cases at
first with bandages, applying them on both sides of the seat
of the injury, but omit them there, and leave the wound uncovered,
and afterward they apply to the wound some cleansing medicine,
and complete the dressing with compresses dipped in wine and
greasy wool. This plan of treatment is bad, and it is clear that
those who adopt this mode of practice are guilty of great mistakes
in other cases of fracture as well as these. For it is a most
important consideration to know in what manner the head of the
bandage should be placed and at what part the greatest pressure
should be, and what benefits would result from applying the end
of the bandage and the pressure at the proper place, and what
mischiefs would result from applying the head of the bandage
and the pressure otherwise than at the proper place. Wherefore
it has been stated in the preceding part of the work what are
the results of either; and the practice of medicine bears witness
to the truth of it, for in a person thus bandaged, a swelling
must necessarily arise on the wound. For, if even a sound piece
of skin were bandaged on either side, and a part were left in
the middle, the part thus left unbandaged would become most swelled,
and would assume a bad color; how then could it be that a wound
would not suffer in like manner? The wound then must necessarily
become discolored and its lips everted, the discharge will be
ichorous and without pus, and the bones, which should not have
got into a state of necrosis, exfoliate; and the wound gets into
a throbbing and inflamed condition. And they are obliged to apply
a cataplasm on account of the swelling, but this is an unsuitable
application to parts which are bandaged on both sides, for a
useless load is added to the throbbing which formerly existed
in it. At last they loose the bandages when matters get very
serious, and conduct the rest of the treatment without bandaging;
and notwithstanding, if they meet with another case of the same
description, they treat it in the same manner, for they do not
think that the application of the bandages on both sides, and
the exposure of the wound are the cause of what happened, but
some other untoward circumstance. Wherefore I would not have
written so much on this subject, if I had not well known that
this mode of bandaging is unsuitable, and yet that many conduct
the treatment in this way, whose mistake it is of vital importance
to correct, while what is here said is a proof, that what was
formerly written as to the circumstances under which bandages
should be tightly applied to fractures or otherwise has been
correctly written.
Part 26
As a general rule it may be said, that
in those cases in which a separation of bone is not expected,
the same treatment should be applied as when the fractures are
not complicated with an external wound; for the extension, adjustment
of the bones, and the bandaging, are to be conducted in the same
manner. To the wound itself a cerate mixed with pitch is to be
applied, a thin folded compress is to be bound upon it, and the
parts around are to be anointed with white cerate. The cloths
for bandages and the other things should be torn broader than
in cases in which there is no wound, and the first turn of the
bandage should be a good deal broader than the wound. For a narrower
bandage than the wound binds the wound like a girdle, which is
not proper, or the first turn should comprehend the whole wound,
and the bandaging should extend beyond it on both sides. The
bandage then should be put on in the direction of the wound,
and should be not quite so tight as when there is no wound, but
the bandage should be otherwise applied in the manner described
above. The bandages should be of a soft consistence, and more
especially so in such cases than in those not complicated with
a wound. The number of bandages should not be smaller, but rather
greater than those formerly described. When applied, the patient
should have the feeling of the parts being properly secured,
but not too tight, and in particular he should be able to say
that they are firm about the wound. And the intervals of time
during which the parts seem to be properly adjusted, and those
in which they get loose, should be the same as those formerly
described. The bandages should be renewed on the third day, and
the after treatment conducted in the same manner as formerly
described, except that in the latter case the compression should
be somewhat less than in the former. And if matters go on properly,
the parts about the wound should be found at every dressing always
more and more free of swelling, and the swelling should have
subsided on the whole part comprehended by the bandages. And
the suppurations will take place more speedily than in the case
of wounds treated otherwise; and the pieces of flesh in the wound
which have become black and dead, will sooner separate and fall
off under this plan of treatment than any other, and the sore
will come more quickly to cicatrization when thus treated than
otherwise. The reason of all this is, that the parts in which
the wound is situated, and the surrounding parts, are kept free
of swelling. In all other respects the treatment is to be conducted
as in cases of fracture without a wound of the integuments. Splints
should not be applied. On this account the bandages should be
more numerous than in the former case, both because they must
be put on less tight, and because the splints are later of being
applied. But if you do apply the splints, they should not be
applied along the wound, and they are to be put on in a loose
manner, especial care being taken that there may be no great
compression from the splints. This direction has been formerly
given. And the diet should be more restricted, and for a longer
period, in those cases in which there is a wound at the commencement,
and when the bones protrude through the skin; and, in a word,
the greater the wound, the more severe and protracted should
the regimen be.
Part 27
The treatment of the sores is the same
in those cases of fracture in which there was no wound of the
skin at first, but one has formed in the course of treatment,
owing to the pressure of the splints occasioned by the bandages,
or from any other cause. In such cases it is ascertained that
there is an ulcer, by the pain and the throbbing; and the swelling
in the extremities becomes harder than usual, and if you apply
your finger the redness disappears, but speedily returns. If
you suspect anything of the kind you must loose the dressing,
if there be any itching below the under-bandages, or in any other
part that is bandaged, and used a pitched cerate instead of the
other. If there be nothing of that, but if the ulcer be found
in an irritable state, being very black and foul, and the fleshy
parts about to suppurate, and the tendons to slough away, in
these cases no part is to be exposed to the air, nor is anything
to be apprehended from these suppurations, but the treatment
is to be conducted in the same manner as in those cases in which
there was an external wound at first. You must begin to apply
the bandages loosely at the swelling in the extremities, and
then gradually proceed upward with the bandaging, so that it
may be tight at no place, but particularly firm at the sore,
and less so elsewhere. The first bandages should be clean and
not narrow, and the number of bandages should be as great as
in those cases in which the splints were used, or somewhat fewer.
To the sore itself a compress, anointed with white cerate, will
be sufficient, for if a piece of flesh or nerve (tendon?) become
black, it will fall off; for such sores are not to be treated
with acrid, but with emollient applications, like burns. The
bandages are to be renewed every third day, and no splints are
to be applied, but rest is to be more rigidly maintained than
in the former cases, along with a restricted diet. It should
be known, that if any piece of flesh or tendon be to come away,
the mischief will spread much less, and the parts will much more
speedily drop off, and the swelling in the surrounding parts
will much more completely subside, under this treatment, than
if any of the cleansing applications be put upon the sore. And
if any part that is to come away shall fall off, the part will
incarnate sooner when thus treated than otherwise, and will more
speedily cicatrize. Such are the good effects of knowing how
a bandage can be well and moderately applied. But a proper position,
the other parts of the regimen, and suitable bandages cooperate.
Part 28
If you are deceived with regard to a recent
wound, supposing there will be no exfoliation of the bones, while
they are on the eve of coming out of the sore, you must not hesitate
to adopt this mode of treatment; for no great mischief will result,
provided you have the necessary dexterity to apply the bandages
well and without doing any harm. And this is a symptom of an
exfoliation of bone being about to take place under this mode
of treatment; pus runs copiously from the sore, and appears striving
to make its escape. The bandage must be renewed more frequently
on account of the discharge, since otherwise fevers come on;
if the sore and surrounding parts be compressed by the bandages
they become wasted. Cases complicated with the exfoliation of
very small bones, do not require any change of treatment, only
the bandages should be put on more loosely, so that the discharge
of pus may not be intercepted, but left free, and the dressings
are to be frequently renewed until the bone exfoliate, and the
splints should not be applied until then.
Part 29
Those cases in which the exfoliation of
a larger piece of bone is expected, whether you discover this
at the commencement, or perceive subsequently that it is to happen,
no longer require the same mode of treatment, only that the extension
and arrangement of the parts are to be performed in a manner
that has been described; but having formed double compresses,
not less than half a fathom in breadth (being guided in this
by the nature of the wound), and considerably shorter than what
would be required to go twice round the part that is wounded,
but considerably longer than to go once round, and in number
what will be sufficient, these are to be dipped in a black austere
wine; and beginning at the middle, as is done in applying the
double-headed bandage, you are to wrap the part around and proceed
crossing the heads in the form of the bandage called "ascia."
These things are to be done at the wound, and on both sides of
it; and there must be no compression, but they are to be laid
on so as to give support to the wound. And on the wound itself
is to be applied the pitched cerate, or one of the applications
to recent wounds, or any other medicine which will suit with
the embrocation. And if it be the summer season, the compresses
are to be frequently damped with wine; but if the winter season,
plenty of greasy wool, moistened with wine and oil, should be
applied. And a goat's skin should be spread below, so as to carry
off the fluids which run from the wound; these must be guarded
against, and it should be kept in mind, that parts which remain
long in the same position are subject to excoriations which are
difficult to cure.
Part 30
In such cases as do not admit of bandaging
according to any of the methods which have been described, or
which will be described, great pains should be taken that the
fractured part of the body be laid in a right position, and attention
should be paid that it may incline upward rather than downward.
But if one would wish to do the thing well and dexterously, it
is proper to have recourse to some mechanical contrivance, in
order that the fractured part of the body may undergo proper
and not violent extension; and this means is particularly applicable
in fractures of the leg. There are certain physicians who, in
all fractures of the leg, whether bandages be applied or not,
fasten the sole of the foot to the couch, or to some other piece
of wood which they have fixed in the ground near the couch. These
persons thus do all sorts of mischief but no good; for it contributes
nothing to the extension that the foot is thus bound, as the
rest of the body will no less sink down to the foot, and thus
the limb will no longer be stretched, neither will it do any
good toward keeping the limb in a proper position, but will do
harm, for when the rest of the body is turned to this side or
that, the bandaging will not prevent the foot and the bones belonging
to it from following the rest of the body. For if it had not
been bound it would have been less distorted, as it would have
been the less prevented from following the motion of the rest
of the body. But one should sew two balls of Egyptian leather,
such as are worn by persons confined for a length of time in
large shackles, and the balls should have coats on each side,
deeper toward the wound, but shorter toward the joints; and the
balls should be well stuffed and soft, and fit well, the one
above the ankles, and the other below the knee. Sideways it should
have below two appendages, either of a single or double thong,
and short, like loops, the one set being placed on either side
of the ankle, and the other on the knee. And the other upper
ball should have others of the same kind in the same line. Then
taking four rods, made of the cornel tree, of equal length, and
of the thickness of a finger, and of such length that when bent
they will admit of being adjusted to the appendages, care should
be taken that the extremities of the rods bear not upon the skin,
but on the extremities of the balls. There should be three sets
of rods, or more, one set a little longer than another, and another
a little shorter and smaller, so that they may produce greater
or less distention, if required. Either of these sets of rods
should be placed on this side and that of the ankles. If these
things be properly contrived, they should occasion a proper and
equable extension in a straight line, without giving any pain
to the wound; for the pressure, if there is any, should be thrown
at the foot and the thigh. And the rods are commodiously arranged
on either side of the ankles, so as not to interfere with the
position of the limb; and the wound is easily examined and easily
arranged. And, if thought proper, there is nothing to prevent
the two upper rods from being fastened to one another; and if
any light covering be thrown over the limb, it will thus be kept
off from the wound. If, then, the balls be well made, handsome,
soft, and newly stitched, and if the extension by the rods be
properly managed, as has been already described, this is an excellent
contrivance; but if any of them do not fit properly, it does
more harm than good. And all other mechanical contrivances should
either be properly done, or not be had recourse to at all, for
it is a disgraceful and awkward thing to use mechanical means
in an unmechanical way.
Part 31
Moreover, the greater part of physicians
treat fractures, both with and without an external wound, during
the first days, by means of unwashed wool, and there does not
appear to be anything improper in this. It is very excusable
for those who are called upon to treat newly-received accidents
of this kind, and who have no cloth for bandages at hand, to
do them up with wool; for, except cloth for bandages, one could
not have anything better than wool in such cases; but a good
deal should be used for this purpose, and it should be well carded
and not rough, for in small quantity and of a bad quality it
has little power. But those who approve of binding up the limb
with wool for a day or two, and on the third and fourth apply
bandages, and make the greatest compression and extension at
that period, such persons show themselves to be ignorant of the
most important principles of medicine; for, in a word, at no
time is it so little proper to disturb all kinds of wounds as
on the third and fourth day; and all sort of probing should be
avoided on these days in whatever other injuries are attended
with irritation. For, generally, the third and fourth day in
most cases of wounds, are those which give rise to exacerbations,
whether the tendency be to inflammation, to a foul condition
of the sore, or to fevers. And if any piece of information be
particularly valuable this is; to which of the most important
cases in medicine does it not apply? and that not only in wounds
but in many other diseases, unless one should call all other
diseases wounds. And this doctrine is not devoid of a certain
degree of plausibility, for they are allied to one another in
many respects. But those who maintain that wool should be used
until after the first seven days, and then that the parts should
be extended and adjusted, and secured with bandages, would appear
not to be equally devoid of proper judgment, for the proper judgment,
for the most dangerous season for inflammation is then past,
and the bones being loose can be easily set after the lapse of
these days. But still this mode of treatment is far inferior
to that with bandages from the commencement; for, the latter
method exhibits the patient on the seventh day free from inflammation,
and ready for complete bandaging with splints; while the former
method is far behind in this respect, and is attended with many
other bad effects which it would be tedious to describe.
31a. In those cases of fracture in which
the bones protrude and cannot be restored to their place, the
following mode of reduction may be practiced:- Some small pieces
of iron are to be prepared like the levers which the cutters
of stone make use of, one being rather broader and another narrower;
and there should be three of them at least, and still more, so
that you may use those that suit best; and then, along with extension,
we must use these as levers, applying the under surface of the
piece of iron to the under fragment of the bone, and the upper
surface to the upper bone; and, in a word, we must operate powerfully
with the lever as we would do upon a stone or a piece of wood.
The pieces of iron should be as strong as possible, so that they
may not bend. This is a powerful assistance, provided the pieces
of iron be suitable, and one use them properly as levers. Of
all the mechanical instruments used by men, the most powerful
are these three, the axis in peritrochio, the lever, and the
wedge. Without these, one or all, men could not perform any of
their works which require great force. Wherefore, reduction with
the lever is not to be despised, for the bones will be reduced
in this way, or not at all. But if the upper fragment which rides
over the other does not furnish a suitable point of support a
suitable point of support for the lever, but the protruding part
is sharp, you must scoop out of the bone what will furnish a
proper place for the lever to rest on. The lever, along with
extension, may be had recourse to on the day of the accident,
or the accident, or next day, but by no means on the third, the
fourth, and the fifth. For if the limb is disturbed on these
days, and yet the fractured bones not reduced, inflammation will
be excited, and this no less if they are reduced; for convulsions
are more apt to occur if reduction take place, than if the attempt
should fail. These facts should be well known, for if convulsions
should come on when reduction is effected, there effected, there
is little hope of recovery; but it is of use to displace the
bones again if this can be done with out trouble. For it is not
at the time when the parts are in a particularly relaxed condition
that convulsions and tetanus are apt to supervene, but when they
are more than usually tense. In the case we are now treating
of, we should not disturb the limb on the aforesaid days, but
strive to keep the wound as free from inflammation as possible,
and especially encourage suppuration in it. But when seven days
have elapsed, or rather more, if there be no fever, and if the
wound be not inflamed, then there will be less to prevent an
attempt at reduction, if you hope to succeed; but otherwise you
need not take and give trouble in vain.
Part 32
When you have reduced the bones to their
place, the modes of treatment, whether you expect the bones to
exfoliate or not, have been already described. All those cases
in which an exfoliation of bone is expected, should be treated
by the method of bandaging with cloths, beginning for the most
part at the middle of the bandage, as is done with the double-headed
bandage; but particular attention should be paid to the shape
of the wound, so that its lips may gape or be distorted as little
as possible under the bandage. Sometimes the turns of the bandage
have to be made to the right, and sometimes to the left, and
sometimes a double-headed bandage is to be used.
Part 33
It should be known that bones, which it
has been found impossible to reduce, as well as those which are
wholly denuded of flesh, will become detached. In some cases
the upper part of the bone is laid bare, and in others the flesh
dies all around; and, from a sore of long standing, certain of
the bones become carious, and some not, some more, and some less;
and in some the small, and in others the large bones. From what
has been said it will be seen, that it is impossible to tell
in one word when the bones will separate. Some come away more
quickly, owing to their smallness, and some from being merely
fixed at the point; and some, from pieces not separating, but
merely exfoliating, become dried up and putrid; and besides,
different modes of treatment have different effects. For the
most part, the bones separate most quickly in those cases in
which suppuration takes place most quickly, and when new flesh
is most quickly formed, and is particularly sound, for the flesh
which grows up below in the wound generally elevates the pieces
of bone. It will be well if the whole circle of the bone separate
in forty days; for in some cases it is protracted to sixty days,
and in some to more; for the more porous pieces of bone separate
more quickly, but the more solid come away more slowly; but the
other smaller splinters in much less time, and others otherwise.
A portion of bone which protrudes should be sawn off for the
following reasons: if it cannot be reduced, and if it appears
sons: that only a small piece is required in order that it may
get back into its place; and if it be such that it can be taken
out, and if it occasions inconvenience and irritates any part
of the flesh, and prevents the limb from being properly laid,
and if, moreover, it be denuded of flesh, such a piece of bone
should be taken off. With regard to the others, it is not of
much consequence whether they be sawed off or not. For it should
be known for certain, that such bones as are completely deprived
of flesh, and have become dried, all separate completely. Those
which are about to exfoliate should not be sawn off. Those that
will separate completely must be judged of from the symptoms
that have been laid down.
Part 34
Such cases are to be treated with compresses
and vinous applications, as formerly laid down regarding bones
which will separate. We must avoid wetting it at the beginning
with anything cold; for there is danger of febrile rigors, and
also of convulsions; for convulsions are induced by cold things,
and also sometimes by wounds. It is proper to know that the members
are necessarily shortened in those cases in which the bones have
been broken, and have healed the one across the other, and in
those cases in which the whole circle of the bone has become
detached.
Part 35
Those cases in which the bone of the thigh,
or of the arm, protrudes, do not easily recover. For the bones
are large, and contain much marrow; and many important nerves,
muscles, and veins are wounded at the same time. And if you reduce
them, convulsions usually supervene; and, if not reduced, acute
bilious fevers come on, with singultus and mortification. The
chances of recovery are not fewer in those cases in which the
parts have not been reduced, nor any attempts made at reduction.
Still more recover in those cases in which the lower, than those
in which the upper part of the bone protrudes; and some will
recover when reduction has been made, but very rarely indeed.
For modes of treatment and peculiarity of constitution make a
great difference as to the capability of enduring such an injury.
And it makes a great difference if the bones of the arm and of
the thigh protrude to the inside; for there are many and important
vessels situated there, some of which, if wounded, will prove
fatal; there are such also on the outside, but of less importance.
In wounds of this sort, then, one ought not to be ignorant of
the dangers, and should prognosticate them in due time. But if
you are compelled to have recourse to reduction, and hope to
succeed, and if the bones do not cross one another much, and
if the muscles are not contracted (for they usually are contracted),
the lever in such cases may be advantageously employed.
Part 36
Having effected the reduction, you must
give an emollient draught of hellebore the same day, provided
it has been reduced on the day of the accident, but otherwise
it should not be attempted. The wound should be treated with
the same things as are used in fractures of the bones of the
head, and nothing cold should be applied; the patient should
be restricted from food altogether, and if naturally of a bilious
constitution, he should have for a diet a little fragrant oxyglyky
sprinkled on water; but if he is not bilious, he should have
water for drink; and if fever of the continual type come on,
he is to be confined to this regimen for fourteen days at least,
but if he be free of fever, for only seven days, and then you
must bring him back by degrees to a common diet. To those cases
in which the bones have not been reduced, a similar course of
medicine should be administered, along with the same treatment
of the sores and regimen; and in like manner the suspended part
of the body should not be stretched, but should rather be contracted,
so as to relax the parts about the wound. The separation of the
bones is protracted, as also was formerly stated. But one should
try to escape from such cases, provided one can do so honorably,
for the hopes of recovery are small, and the dangers many; and
if the physician do not reduce the fractured bones he will be
looked upon as upon as unskillful, while by reducing them he
will bring the patient nearer to death than to recovery.
Part 37
Luxations and subluxations at the knee
are much milder accidents than subluxations and luxations at
the elbow. For the knee-joint, in proportion to its size, is
more compact than that of the arm, and has a more even conformation,
and is rounded, while the joint of the arm is large, and has
many cavities. And in addition, the bones of the leg are nearly
of the same length, for the external one overtops the other to
so small an extent as hardly to deserve being mentioned, and
therefore affords no great resistance, although the external
nerve (ligament?) at the ham arises from it; but the bones of
the fore-arm are unequal, and the shorter is considerably thicker
than the other, and the more slender (ulna?) protrudes, and passes
up above the joint, and to it (the olecranon?) are attached the
nerves (ligaments?) which go downward to the junction of the
bones; and the slender bone (ulna?) has more to do with the insertion
of the ligaments in the arm than the thick bone (radius?). The
configuration then of the articulations, and of the bones of
the elbow, is such as I have described. Owing to their configuration,
the bones at the knee are indeed frequently dislocated, but they
are easily reduced, for no great inflammation follows, nor any
constriction of the joint. They are displaced for the most part
to the inside, sometimes to the outside, and occasionally into
the ham. The reduction in all these cases is not difficult, but
in the dislocations inward and outward, the patient should be
placed on a low seat, and the thigh should be elevated, but not
much. Moderate extension for the most part sufficeth, extension
being made at the leg, and counter-extension at the thigh.
Part 38
Dislocations at the elbow are more troublesome
than those at the knee, and, owing to the inflammation which
comes on, and the configuration of the joint, are more difficult
to reduce if the bones are not immediately replaced. For the
bones at the elbow are less subject to dislocation than those
of the knee, but are more difficult to reduce and keep in their
position, and are more apt to become inflamed and ankylosed.
Part 39
For the most part the displacements of
these bones are small, sometimes toward the ribs, and sometimes
to the outside; and the whole articulation is not displaced,
but that part of the humerus remains in place which is articulated
with the cavity of the bone of the forearm that has a protuberance
(ulna?). Such dislocations, to whatever side, are easily reduced,
and the extension is to be made in the line of the arm, one person
making extension at the wrist, and another grasping the armpit,
while a third, applying the palm of his hand to the part of the
joint which is displaced, pushes it inward ward, and at the same
time makes counterpressure on the opposite side near the joint
with the other hand.
Part 40
The end of the humerus at the ,elbow gets
displaced (subluxated?) by leaving the cavity of the ulna. Such
luxations readily yield to reduction, if applied before the parts
get inflamed. The displacement for the most part is to the inside,
but sometimes to the outside, and they are readily recognized
by the shape of the limb. And often such luxations are reduced
without any powerful extension. In dislocations inward, the joint
is to be pushed into its place, while the fore-arm is brought
round to a state of pronation. Such are most of the dislocations
at the elbow.
Part 41
But if the articular extremity of the humerus
be carried to either side above the bone of the fore-arm, which
is prominent, into the hollow of the arm (?), this rarely happens;
but if it does happen, extension in the straight line is not
so proper under such circumstances; for in such a mode of extension,
the process of the ulna (olecranon?) prevents the bone of the
arm (humerus?) from passing over it. In dislocations of this
kind, extension should be made in the manner described when treating
of the bandaging of fractured bones of the arm, extension being
made upward at the armpit, while the parts at the elbow are pushed
downward, for in this manner can the humerus be most readily
raised above its cavity; and when so raised, the reduction is
easy with the palms of the hand, the one being applied so as
to make pressure on the protuberant part of the arm, and the
other making counter-pressure, so as to push the bone of the
fore-arm into the joint. This method answers with both cases.
And perhaps this is the most suitable mode of reduction in such
a case of dislocation. The parts may be reduced by extension
in a straight line, but less readily than thus.
Part 42
If the arm be dislocated forward- this
rarely happens, indeed, but what would a sudden shock not displace?
for many other things are removed from their proper place, notwithstanding
a great obstacle,- in such a violent displacement the part (olecranon?)
which passes above the prominent part of the bones is large,
and the stretching of the nerves (ligaments?) is intense; and
yet the parts have been so dislocated in certain cases. The following
is the symptom of such a displacement: the arm cannot be bent
in the least degree at the elbow, and upon feeling the joint
the nature of the accident becomes obvious. If, then, it is not
speedily reduced, strong and violent inflammation, attended with
fever, will come on, but if one happen to be on the spot at the
time it is easily reduced. A piece of hard linen cloth (or a
piece of hard linen, not very large, rolled up in a ball, will
be sufficient) is to be placed across the bend of the elbow,
and the arm is then to be suddenly bent at the elbow, and the
hand brought up to the shoulder. This mode of reduction is sufficient
in such displacements; and extension in the straight line can
rectify this manner of dislocation, but we must use at the same
time the palms of the hands, applying the one to the projecting
part of the humerus at the bend of the arm for the purpose of
pushing it back, and applying the other below to the sharp extremity
of the elbow, to make counter-pressure, and incline the parts
into the straight line. And one may use with advantage in this
form of dislocation the method of extension formerly described,
for the application of the bandages in the case of fracture of
the arm; but when extension is made, the parts are to be adjusted,
as has been also described above.
Part 43
But if the arm be dislocated backward (but
this very rarely happens, and it is the most painful of all,
and the most subject to bilious fevers of the continual type,
which prove fatal in the course of a few days), in such a case
the patient cannot extend the arm. If you are quickly present,
by forcible extension the parts may return to their place of
their own accord; but if fever have previously come on, you must
no longer attempt reduction, for the pain will be rendered more
intense by any such violent attempt. In a word, no joint whatever
should be reduced during the prevalence of fever, and least of
all the elbow-joint.
Part 44
There are also other troublesome injuries
connected with the elbow-joint; for example, the thicker bone
(radius?) is sometime partially displaced from the other, and
the patient can neither perform extension nor flexion properly.
This accident becomes obvious upon examination with the hand
at the bend of the arm near the division of the vein that runs
up the muscle. In such a case it is not easy to reduce the parts
to their natural state, nor is it easy, in the separation of
any two bones united by symphysis, to restore them to their natural
state, for there will necessarily be a swelling at the seat of
the diastasis. The method of bandaging a joint has been already
described in treating of the application of bandages to the ankle.
Part 45
In certain cases the process of the ulna
(olecranon?) behind the humerus is broken; sometimes its cartilaginous
part, which gives origin to the posterior tendon of the arm,
and sometimes its fore part, at the base of the anterior coronoid
process; and when this
displacement takes place, it is apt to
be attended with malignant fever. The joint, however, remains
in place, for its whole base protrudes at that point. But when
the displacement takes place where its head overtops the arm,
the joint becomes looser if the bone be fairly broken across.
To speak in general terms, all cases of fractured bones are less
dangerous than those in which the bones are not broken, but the
veins and important nerves (tendons?) situated in these places
are contused; for the risk of death is more immediate in the
latter class of cases than in the former, if continual fever
come on. But fractures of this nature seldom occur.
Part 46
It sometimes happens that the head of the
humerus is fractured at its epiphysis; and this, although it
may appear to be a much more troublesome accident, is in fact
a much milder one than the other injuries at the joint.
Part 47
The treatment especially befitting each
particular dislocation has been described; and it has been laid
down as a rule, that immediate reduction is of the utmost advantage,
owing to the rapid manner in which inflammation of the tendons
supervenes. For even when the luxated parts are immediately reduced,
the tendons usually become stiffened, and for a considerable
time prevent extension and flexion from being performed to the
ordinary extent. are to be treated in a similar way, whether
the extremity of the articulating bone be snapped off, whether
the bones be separated, or whether they be dislocated; for they
are all to be treated with plenty of bandages, compresses, and
cerate, like other fractures. The position of the joint in all
these cases should be the same, as when a fractured arm or fore-arm
has been bound up. For this is the most common position in all
dislocations, displacements, and fractures; and it is the most
convenient for the subsequent movements, whether of extension
or flexion, as being the intermediate stage between both. And
this is the position in which the patient can most conveniently
carry or suspend his arm in a sling. And besides, if the joint
is to be stiffened by callus, it were better that this should
not take place when the arm is extended, for this position will
be a great impediment and little advantage; if the arm be wholly
bent, it will be more useful; but it will be much more convenient
to have the joint in the intermediate position when it becomes
ankylosed. So much with regard to position.
Part 48
In bandaging, the head of the first bandage
should be placed at the seat of the injury, whether it be a case
of fracture, of dislocation, or of diastasis (separation?), and
the first turns should be made there, and the bandages should
be applied most firmly at that place, and less so on either side.
The bandaging should comprehend both the arm and the fore-arm,
and on both should be to a much greater extent than most physicians
apply it, so that the swelling may be expelled from the seat
of the injury to either side. And point of the fore-arm should
be comprehended in the bandaging, whether the injury be in that
place or not, in order that the swelling may not collect there.
In applying bandages, we must avoid as much as possible accumulating
many turns of the bandage at the bend of the arm. For the principal
compression should be at the seat of the injury, and the same
rules are to be observed, and at the same periods, with regard
to compression and relaxation, as formerly described respecting
the treatment of broken bones; and the bandages should be renewed
every third day; and they should appear loose on the third day,
as in the other case. And splints should be applied at the proper
time (for there is nothing unsuitable in them, whether the bones
be fractured or not, provided there is no fever); they should
be particularly loose, whether applied to the arm or the forearm,
but they must not be thick. It is necessary that they should
be of unequal size, and that the one should ride over the other,
whenever from the flexion it is judged proper. And the application
of the compresses should be regulated in the same manner as has
been stated with regard to the splints; and they should be put
on in a somewhat more bulky form at the seat of the injury. The
periods are to be estimated from the inflammation, and from what
has been written on them above.
-THE END-