Case III. Mary Adel, aged thirty, as she was crossing a path covered with ice, in the severe winter of 1788, fell on the point of her left shoulder, and fractured the clavicle about the middle. Being brought to the Hotel-Dieu a few hours after the accident, she was dressed in the manner just described, and, as the fracture was simple, it was judged sufficient to make a slight diminution in the quantity of her aliment, during the two or three first days. The dressing was moistened every morning, with vegeto-mineral water, at the place corresponding to the fracture.
On the fourth day the piece of linen that surrounded the bandage was removed, for the purpose of examining the state of the parts. Every thing was found in its proper situation, and the covering was replaced till the seventh day, when the rollers appeared to be somewhat relaxed. The apparatus was taken off, and reapplied as at first, the compresses being carefully moistened with vegeto-mineral water, at the part lying over the fracture. After the third day the patient was permitted to return to her usual regimen. The third roller being a little deranged on the tenth day, it was taken off, and reapplied as at first, together with the sling. The fragments were examined and found in perfect contact. The patient was up during the whole day, walked about the house, and experienced no other inconvenience than that of not being able to use the left arm.
On the thirteenth day, the bandage was again reapplied, and allowed to remain till the sixteenth, when the patient having disturbed it, it was once more changed. At this period, the fragments, already firmly united, exhibited scarcely a vestige of the division they had sustained.
The reunion was complete by the twentieth day, when all the pieces of apparatus were dispensed with, except the bolster and the second roller, which were also removed two days afterwards, as they were found to be no longer necessary.
The continued inactivity of the limb, during the treatment, had occasioned a stiffness in the shoulder. This was gradually done away by making the patient move her arm in all directions, twice a day, each time, for the space of an hour.
On the twenty-ninth day she left the hospital, carrying with her nothing to remind her of the injury she had sustained. She was free from that uneasiness which is the consequence of a tedious and ill-managed treatment, during which the exercise of the limb has been neglected.
§ IX.
OF COMPLICATIONS.
44. We are in possession of but few observations particularly relative to the different complications, that may accompany fractures of the clavicle. The treatment, in such cases, varied according to circumstances, must be accommodated to the indications common to all fractures of this kind.