[p. 199]with wool; for, except cloth for bandages,
one could not have anything better than wool in such cases; but a
good deal should be used for this purpose, and it should be well carded
and not rough, for in small quantity and of a bad quality it has little
power. But those who approve of binding up the limb with wool for
a day or two, and on the third and fourth apply bandages, and make
the greatest compression and extension at that period, such persons
show themselves to be ignorant of the most important principles of
medicine; for, in a word, at no time is it so little proper to disturb
all kinds of wounds as on the third and fourth day; and all sort of
probing should be avoided on these days in whatever other injuries
are attended with irritation. For, generally, the third and fourth
day in most cases of wounds, are those which give rise to exacerbations,
whether the tendency be to inflammation, to a foul condition of the
sore, or to fevers. And if any piece of information be particularly
valuable this is; to which of the most important cases in medicine
does it not apply? and that not only in wounds but in many other diseases,
unless one should call all other diseases wounds. And this doctrine
is not devoid of a certain degree of plausibility, for they are allied
to one another in many respects. But those who maintain that wool
should be used until after the first seven days, and then that the
parts should be extended and adjusted, and secured with bandages,
would appear not to be equally devoid of proper judgment, for the
proper judgment, for the most dangerous season for inflammation is
then past, and the bones being loose can be easily set after the lapse
of these days. But still this mode of treatment is far inferior to
that with bandages from the commencement; for, the latter method exhibits
the patient on the seventh day free from inflammation, and ready for
complete bandaging with splints; while the former method is far behind
in this respect, and is attended with many other bad effects which
it would be tedious to describe.
Part 31a
In those cases of fracture in which the bones protrude and cannot
be restored to their place, the following mode of reduction may be
practiced:- Some small pieces of iron are to be prepared like the
levers which the cutters of stone make use of, one being
|