Case 3.
Case 3 T. F.—Teamster. Irish parentage. Age 20. A. C. C. Disp. Bubonocele, left side. First noted four weeks previously. Operation May 14, 1905. Area sterilized. Small area of skin infiltrated with a one percent solution of cocain. Paraffin melting point 108, injected over area of prominence of bubonocele and into upper portion of canal. Two punctures made a dram and a half of paraffin injected. Parts sensitive for three days so that patient walked without bending thigh at hip joint. No temperature. Local applications. Codeine given in quarter grain doses every two hours. Fourth day parts much less sensitive, can bend leg freely in sitting or walking. Area prominent from swelling but no impulse. Examination June 25, 1905. No pain, no tenderness, no impulse, prominence in region of internal ring slightly greater than on opposite side.
Case 4.
Case 4 A. P.—Sicilian. Worker in shoe factory. Age 24. Hernia four months duration. Never retained by truss. Sac extends half way to bottom of scrotum. Pubes shaved, skin sterilized. Operation Aug. 26, 1905. Skin infiltrated to allow passage of large needle without pain. Injection at internal ring of forty minims. Injections into canal of about thirty minims. In attempting to inject paraffin in cold state screw piston syringe broken. All metal syringe used for infiltrating, warmed and filled with melted paraffin. In using syringe to inject the canal near the external ring the needle plugged. Using all force possible the plug forced from needle and over a dram of melted paraffin thrown between the pillars of the external ring. Patient complained of considerable pain. Codeine used one-fourth grain every hour. On the third day after injection skin over the external ring infiltrated and with sharp spoon about a half dram of paraffin removed. Operation
painless. Formaldehyde solutions one to five thousand used as moist dressings. Codeine continued for two days longer. Patient lost one week from work. Sept. 24, 1905. No recurrence, no pain or tenderness. Area at former site of hernia slightly more prominent than opposite side, no redness of skin.
Case 5.
Case 5 F. C.—American born, age 18. Private patient. Hernia about size of average marble midway between ensiform cartilage and umbilicus. Spontaneous origin. Injected at office with half dram of paraffin, melting point 115. Operation Dec. 2, 1905. About half dram total quantity used. No reaction when adhesive strip removed on fourth day. Slightly tender on pressure. Examination Feb. 7, 1906. No recurrence, no redness, no pain.