INCISED, PUNCTURED, AND CONTUSED WOUNDS OF THE EXTREMITIES.
These may be fatal if a large blood vessel or vessels are opened, or sometimes if a compound fracture or wound of a joint becomes infected. They may also in some cases be fatal from shock, from the severity of the injury. As a rule they are the cause of civil suits, not of criminal ones. The various injuries may cause disability for a longer or shorter time, or even permanently, and more or less deformity may also remain. This may be the case with fractures, especially if they occur near the joints, in which case great caution should be exercised in giving an opinion or prognosis. It is a common mistaken idea of the laity that a fractured or dislocated limb can be made in every case as good as before the injury. On the contrary, they not infrequently leave a slight deformity and impairment of function, sometimes even under the best treatment. Dislocations may also leave a lasting disability or weakness, often owing to the carelessness of the injured person.
Wounds of an artery or vein, or both, may result in an aneurism or an arterio-venous aneurism. Wounds of nerves may cause paralysis and anæsthesia of the parts supplied. Wounds of muscles or tendons may cause weakness or complete loss of motion of particular joints. Wounds of the soft parts, if infected, may lead to cellulitis and phlegmonous inflammation, which may result in much injury. Wounds of joints, if penetrating, are serious, for without the proper treatment they may result in suppuration in the joint, disorganization of the joint, and final ankylosis. Before the use of antiseptic treatment such wounds were not uncommonly fatal. Fractures, simple or compound, or contusions of bone especially in young subjects, may be followed by osteo-periostitis and its consequences, which may require a long time for recovery after the fracture is entirely recovered from, and a still longer time before the limb can be used. These and many other of the various results of wounds and injuries of the extremities, causing deformity or disability, or both, can often be cured or improved by surgical treatment or operation.
THE MEDICO-LEGAL CONSIDERATION
OF
GUNSHOT WOUNDS.
BY
ROSWELL PARK, A.M., M.D.,
Professor of Surgery in the University of Buffalo; Attending Surgeon to the Buffalo
General Hospital; Fellow of the German Congress of Surgeons; of the American
Orthopædic Association; of the American Genito-Urinary
Surgeons’ Association; of the New York Academy
of Medicine, etc., etc.