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Alphabetical    [«  »]
boiled 1
boldly 1
bond 1
bone 88
bones 79
border 1
borne 1
Frequency    [«  »]
93 there
93 these
91 all
88 bone
85 part
82 patient
81 them
Hippocrates
On the Articulations

IntraText - Concordances

bone

   Part
1 1 | forward, but the rest of the bone is turned outward. The humerus 2 2 | and yet by rotating the bone of the joint, they force 3 3 | with his foot against the bone at the top of the shoulder. 4 6 | whereby the head of the bone may be forced into its natural 5 7 | and safely applied to the bone of the arm. Wherefore recent 6 8 | so constructed that the bone readily leaps out and another 7 10| prominent, owing to the bone of the joint having sunk 8 12| patient be still growing, the bone of the affected arm will 9 12| suppurations about the head of the bone, all become weasel-armed; 10 13| acromion has been torn off, the bone which is thus separated 11 13| separated appears prominent. The bone is the bond of connection 12 13| accident (for as the separated bone protrudes, the top of the 13 13| deformity in the place, for the bone cannot be properly restored 14 13| For neither can any other bone be made exactly as it was, 15 13| incorporated with another bone, and having grown to it 16 14| would have supposed; for a bone fairly broken across can 17 14| the projecting part of the bone is not very sharp. But in 18 14| and the prominence of the bone is very sharp. For the most 19 14| placed on the projecting bone, and that the greatest pressure 20 14| to depress the projecting bone; but this mode of treatment 21 14| compresses upon the projecting bone when they apply them, and 22 14| the projecting end of the bone. But it is clear that the 23 14| adjusted to the fragment of the bone connected with the breast 24 15| so that the fragment of bone connected with the breast 25 15| go, the fragments of the bone will be adjusted to one 26 16| arm upward. When the upper bone is displaced laterally or 27 16| hand to the head of the bone, would push it away, and 28 16| formerly stated, the upper bone (sternal fragment?) is rarely 29 26| the hand on the projecting bone one pushes forward, and 30 26| from behind on the other bone; some soft substance is 31 27| be made on the projecting bone, and counter-pressure on 32 29| pressure on the projecting bone, and counter-pressure on 33 30| jaw-bone (malar?) and the bone behind the ear (temporal?) 34 32| the lower jaw, when the bone is not fairly broken across, 35 32| distorted and loosened, when the bone is adjusted, they should 36 32| linen thread, until the bone be consolidated, and then 37 32| to rectify the displaced bone. It would be best if one 38 33| 33. But if the bone be fairly broken across ( 39 36| the skin surrounding the bone is contused on its ridge 40 36| near the middle, or if the bone itself have sustained some 41 38| 38. When the fractured bone is displaced laterally, 42 39| apprehend that pieces of bone will come out. The parts, 43 41| dyspnoea is induced by this bone inclining inward, until 44 47| has no proper hold at the bone called the os sacrum; and 45 50| mucosity be lodged near the bone, for the flesh no longer 46 50| no longer adheres to the bone as formerly, the bone becomes 47 50| the bone as formerly, the bone becomes diseased, and chronic 48 50| chronic sloughings of the bone in many cases arise from 49 50| mischief be not upon the bone, but it is the flesh itself 50 50| the flesh adhere to the bone. The best cure is the cautery 51 50| be carried as far as the bone, but the bone itself should 52 50| far as the bone, but the bone itself should not be heated; 53 50| contusion appear to be at the bone, if it be still recent, 54 50| be still recent, and the bone has not yet become necrosed, 55 50| if the rising along the bone be oblong, several eschars 56 51| two reasons truly; for the bone which articulates with the 57 51| limb, and the head of the bone is felt at the perineum 58 52| shortened, and especially the bone of the thigh; and the whole 59 53| those cases in which the bone of the leg is dislocated, 60 53| place at the hip-joint, the bone of the thigh, in this case, 61 53| growth, such persons have the bone of the arm shortened, but 62 53| because the humerus is the bone nearest to the joint affected, 63 54| femur no longer rests on a bone as in dislocation inward, 64 54| but along the side of a bone which naturally inclines 65 55| and in certain of them the bone is laid bare), whether the 66 55| laid bare), whether the bone become necrosed or not, 67 55| become necrosed or not, the bone of the thigh is much shortened, 68 57| extended, and also because the bone has slipped into the flesh 69 57| appears looser, from the bone of the joint having slipped 70 58| to rotate the articular bone in the flesh; he finds it 71 58| limb be not reduced, the bone of the thigh becomes shortened, 72 60| of the pain, and when the bone of the joint has been accustomed 73 60| congenital, in these cases the bone of the thigh is more atrophied 74 61| those cases in which the bone has slipped or been displaced 75 61| attitudes; but when the bone has slipped, or been displaced 76 62| push back and rectify the bone of the leg at the ankle 77 62| counter-pressure on the bone of the heel in an outward 78 64| wound and projection of the bone, whether the bones of the 79 64| formerly described, if the bone be reduced, and allowed 80 65| in such a case, if the bone be reduced, death will be 81 67| there is no fracture of the bone, but merely displacement 82 70| the same time he uses the bone of the fore-arm as a lever, 83 74| 74. If the head of the bone slip outward, extension 84 74| to be used to force the bone from without inward, the 85 77| resistance of the articular bone. But if the bladder must 86 80| same time the projecting bone is to be pushed into its 87 80| that the extremity of the bone has cleared the rim, at 88 80| that extension is made, the bone is to be pushed direct into


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