69. If some unfavourable cases, resulting without doubt from these inconveniences, did occur in the practice of Desault, a multitude of successful ones still attest the advantages of this method; and there is not a pupil who attended any time at the Hotel-Dieu, without witnessing them. I will relate but one case, collected by Chorin, to furnish a detail of the treatment subsequent to reduction, referring the reader for further information to the Journal of Surgery.

Case II. Theresa Little-John, aged 45 years, fell, drawn by the weight of her own body, through a window in a balcony, from which she was leaning. She was instantly taken up, carried to her own house, and from thence to the Hotel-Dieu, which she entered on the 28th of October, 1790. From the signs mentioned (9), a fracture was discovered towards the lower part of the thigh; its oblique disposition required an apparatus to make permanent extension. This was applied in the usual manner, and, in an instant, the patient, who had experienced, since her fall, severe pain, became calm, and was completely relieved.

In the night, pains returned; agitation; some spasmodic motions; an anodyne draught administered in the morning. In the course of the day, these troublesome symptoms disappear; a slight swelling at the ancle. Third day, no pain; swelling gone; aliment increased. Sixth day, patient permitted to return to her usual regimen; extending rollers relaxed; lower one tightened: eleventh day, apparatus renewed; fragments in perfect contact: thirteenth day, limb moved incautiously; a slight shortening; apparatus reapplied; extending bandages drawn tight: sixteenth day, a disposition slightly bilious; evacuants administered with success: twenty-fourth day, a third application of the bandage: thirtieth day, progress in consolidation already very evident; the limb straight: fortieth day, extending rollers laid aside: fifty-second day, consolidation complete without the least deformity.

70. The muscular force, in children, being weak, and the weight of the body inconsiderable, have, in general, much less influence in producing a displacement in them than they do in adults. When, therefore, fractures occur in subjects under six or seven years old, the resistance, on the part of the apparatus, need not be so great. In general the lateral pressure which it makes, and the bearing of its different pieces against the limb, are sufficient to prevent the return of deformity, when this has been perfectly removed by reduction.

71. In such cases Desault covered the thigh with a circular bandage, made of a roller seven ells long, and three inches broad. Beginning with this below, near to the condyls, he carried it upwards, by oblique and reversed turns, to the pelvis, round which he threw a cast; then, giving the ball into the hand of an assistant, he applied four splints, one before, another behind, and one on each side: directing these to be held at their lower part near to the knee, he resumed the roller, and secured them firmly by a second series of circular and reversed turns, descending to the lower extremity of the thigh. The limb was then placed in a proper position, and, in general, of whatever kind the fracture was, whether oblique or transverse, this simple bandage, without the aid of permanent extension, was sufficient to retain it.

72. It would be difficult to determine the period necessary for the consolidation of fractures of the os femoris. Numerous circumstances concur to influence this work of nature, which is, in general, extended beyond the term of forty days, vulgarly assigned to it by the people at large. Besides, a stiffness of the limb, the inevitable effect of its long state of rest, still adds to the length of the patient’s confinement, by retarding the necessary motions, the return of which, as in other similar cases, can be accelerated only by exercise.

73. Complicated fractures of the os femoris, being included in the general class of solutions of continuity of that description, cannot be at present particularly considered. We will only remark, that here, in like manner, as in fractures of the clavicle, permanent extension constitutes the most effectual method of preventing the pains, oftentimes insupportable, occasioned by splinters or points of bone irritating the soft parts, from being pressed against them by muscular action in its tendency to shorten the limb.

§ IX.