Page:A descriptive catalogue of the Warren Anatomical Museum.djvu/713

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search
This page needs to be proofread.

On his admission into the hospital (144, 6), he stated that four months before, whilst standing near a circular saw, a piece of wood flew against his face, inflicted a wound an inch or two in length, and then, as he supposed, fell to the ground. The wound soon very nearly healed ; but an abscess formed behind the ear and discharged ; and there was once a discharge of pus from the meatus. On admis- sion, the cheek was a little thickened, and the foreign body was indistinctly felt. Pain chiefly in the mouth, with a discharge into it, and a sinus in the cheek and behind the ear. On the following day the piece of wood was removed, and in a few days he left the hospital quite relieved. During the operation there was a discharge of blood from the ear, and also from the sinus behind it. 1869.

Dr. E. M. Hodges.

3116. An iron hay-hook, by which a little girl was transfixed. It was purchased of the family by Dr. Stimson, who was called to the child at the time of the accident, and who removed the hook.

The case was attended by Dr. J. P. Maynard, of Ded- ham, and fully reported by him in the Med. Jour. (Vol. LVII. p. 29), with a figure. The child, eleven years of age, was sliding down a hay-mow, May 9th, 1857, when she fell upon the hook, the point of which passed through the perineum and bladder, and made an external wound, f in. in width upon the left side of the umbilicus. The hook in. ; transversely at the barb, nearly 2 in. ; and it was supposed to have entered the body to the extent of 1 1 in. Dr. M. saw the child just after the withdrawal, and found her in a state of collapse ; but in the night she began to rally. Urgent vomiting protruded a portion of omentum, which was returned with difficulty ; and, the opening being closed, it did not again escape. For a time the urine passed altogether through the wounded bladder, and with it what appeared to be fsecal matter from the small intes- tine ; but this gradually diminished. Small sloughs of cel- lular tissue, also, for a time came away. On the fifth day violent peritonitis ensued, but this soon subsided ; and on the twentieth day there was severe pain. On the llth of

�� �