A second precaution, not less essential, is, to push the humeral extremity of the clavicle, a little forward, and fix it in that direction, in order that the sternal being directed backward, may be removed from the place[8] through which it has a tendency to escape.
22. Desault almost always obtained complete success by this process, and by the most accurate attention to prevent the relaxation of the bandage. In the mean time, a stiffness, more or less considerable, always remains in the joint for a long time after the reduction, and it is not unfrequently a month or two before the part recovers its usual facility of motion.
The following cases, collected by Brochier, confirm the doctrine for which I have been contending.
Case II. A man luxated the clavicle by falling on the point of his shoulder, and forcing it backward. He was immediately brought to the Hotel-Dieu, where Desault demonstrated to his pupils, that the head of the bone, carried in front of the sternum, was removed nearly an inch from its natural cavity, the ligaments of which were no doubt lacerated.
Here, as in the fracture of the clavicle, the application of the bandage answered the purpose of reduction, and removed the protuberance formed by the extremity of the bone.
The patient, being strong and vigorous, and having received besides a violent contusion, was bled twice, and confined to a low diet. On the following day, no derangement; on the fourth day, a slight displacement of the bone, the rollers a little relaxed, bandage applied anew. Eighth day, no sensible displacement. Eleventh day, some swelling around the joint; compresses, wet with vegeto-mineral water, ordered to be frequently renewed. Twentieth day, the swelling almost gone, and no disposition to a displacement; the apparatus was removed; motions at first difficult, and contracted. Twenty-ninth day, more free and easy. Thirty-fourth day, returned to their natural state.
Case III. Mary Rivert luxated her clavicle, on the seventh day of January 1789. Being brought some time afterwards, to the Hotel-Dieu, she was treated in the same manner as the foregoing patient, and with the same result, except that a very slight protuberance remained at the extremity of the bone, and the confined state of the motions continued a little longer. Desault related, in his lectures, other instances of cures being performed without the least remaining deformity.
After all, even supposing the method just proposed, to possess no other advantage, than that of diminishing the protuberance of the bone, which, under other modes of treatment, is almost inevitable, and by that means preventing the motions of the part from being confined, it would still, without doubt, be a great step towards the perfection of the art.