Treatment of compound fractures. Part One.

Date:
[between 1930 and 1939?]
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Credit

Treatment of compound fractures. Part One. Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International (CC BY-NC 4.0). Source: Wellcome Collection.

About this work

Description

The method of treating compound fractures of the leg and knee both surgically and post-operatively (with and without plaster) is demonstrated. Evidence is provided of the efficacy of treatment with recovered patients walking before the camera displaying a normal gait. The surgical footage is, however, rather graphic despite the nature and age of the material. Treatment is devised to ward against infection. A severely emaciated male patient is shown with sepsis as a result of an infected hip joint. He is almost entombed with spica plaster. His condition improves (very indistinct graphs are shown). Two years later he is seen recovered, if not scared and needing to walk with the aid of sticks. The last case is of a yachtsman who shot off a large part of his tibia with a starting rifle; the wound is large and oozing. The injury took a year to heal. Intertitle; End of part one. 1 segment.

Publication/Creation

England, [between 1930 and 1939?]

Physical description

1 encoded moving image (16.22 min.) : silent, black and white

Duration

00:16:22

Copyright note

Wellcome Trust 2013

Terms of use

Unrestricted
CC-BY-NC
Creative Commons Attribution-Non-Commercial 2.0 UK: England & Wales

Language note

In English

Creator/production credits

By R. Watson Jones, Liverpool.

Contents

Segment 1 The method of treating compound fractures of the leg and knee both surgically and post-operatively (with and without plaster) is demonstrated. Evidence is provided of the efficacy of treatment with recovered patients walking before the camera displaying a normal gait. The surgical footage is, however, rather graphic despite the nature and age of the material. Treatment is devised to ward against infection. A severely emaciated male patient is shown with sepsis as a result of an infected hip joint. He is almost entombed with spica plaster. His condition improves (very indistinct graphs are shown). Two years later he is seen recovered, if not scared and needing to walk with the aid of sticks. The last case is of a yachtsman who shot off a large part of his tibia with a starting rifle; the wound is large and oozing. The injury took a year to heal. Intertitle; End of part one. Time start: 00:00:00:00 Time end: 00:16:22:00 Length: 00:16:22:00

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