Part
12
In fractures we must attend to the length, breadth, thickness, and number of
the compresses. The length should be that of the bandaging; the breadth, three
or four fingers; thickness, three or fourfold; number so as to encircle the
limb, neither more nor less; those applied for the purpose of rectifying a
deformity, should be of such a length as to encircle it; the breadth and thickness
being determined by the vacuity, which is not to be filled up at once. The
upper bandages are two, the first of which is to be carried from the seat of
the injury upwards, and the second from the seat of the injury downwards, and
from below upwards; the parts about the seat of the injury being most
compressed, the extremities least, and the rest in proportion. The upper
bandages should take in a considerable portion of the sound parts. We must
attend to the number, length, and breadth of the bandages; the number must be
such as not to be inferior to what the injury requires, nor occasion
compression with the splints, nor prove cumbersome, nor occasion any slipping
of them, nor render them inefficient. As to length and breadth, they should be
three, four, five, or six cubits in length, and as many fingers broad. The
folds of the strings (selvages?) should be such as not to occasion pressure;
they are to be soft and not thick; and all these things are to be proportionate
to the length, breadth, and thickness of the part affected. The splints are to
be smooth, even, and rounded at the extremities; somewhat less all along than
the upper bandaging, and thickest at the part to which fracture inclines. Those
parts where there are tuberosities, and which are devoid of flesh, such as the
ankles or fingers, we must guard from the splints which are placed over them,
either by position, or by their shortness. They are to be secured by the
strings in such a manner as not to occasion pressure at first. A soft, consistent,
and clean cerate should be rubbed into the folds of the bandage.
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