I>I I 





CR Wll « I' 'MY 



lie]. Ii 



, injured 



C -< 



. 



of a 

 . and in- 

 C -pessary, a cradle-shaped 

 ie uterus. 

 m] I 'i ston 



se merely of 



C. -stunt, arrest in mental 



\. C. -stunted, arrested 



idy. 



Cramp \ 5p ismodic tonic 



with >harp pain. 

 1: calf. 



. and 



C, Accommo- 



of the eye. C, 



Auctioneer >es affect- 



. aris oris muscle. 

 C - C, Ballet-dancers', 



>pe- 

 by pain and 



fcalf. 

 upon the part-. C- 

 bo:. C, Black- 



smith - C, Car-drivers', 



-■ d ; erhaps 



;pasm and weak- 



' -brakes. 



Chisel. ing in smiths, 



thi o mtinuous 

 nt. C, Cigar- 

 maker n.il neurosi s,c< msist- 



es of the 



itions also extend 



C, Cigaret-makers'. 



C, Clarionet-players', a cramp 



■ u les experienced 



trument. C. Colic, 



by contrac- 



small intestines 



C, Coach- 



rn< " isionally 



C, Cornet-players', a rare and 



r . in 



d, from inability 

 C, Dancers'. 

 C. Elocutionists'. 

 C, Flute-players', slight 

 lly in fl 

 t. Also 

 band, 

 C, Glass- 

 blower I and permanenl 



to the 

 with wh 

 ldbeatc: ; ,u-- 



C, Himmer. n's. 



■ 





C, Hammermen's, a spasmodic affection of tin- 

 musi les "i the arm and shoulder, at times unattended 

 with pain, due to the repeated act oi hammering. C, 

 Knitters', a peculiar affection "t the hands "t those 

 uh>. knit, consisting in a contraction of the extensor 

 muscles, with numbness oi the ends oi the 6ngers. C, 

 Milkers', a spasmodic contraction oi the extensors 

 and flexors of th rm in consequence of continu- 



ous exertion in milking. C, Milkmaids'. See ('.. 

 MM rs' . C, Musicians', .1 genera] term including 

 pianists' cramp, violinists' cramp, flutists' cramp, 

 the cramp of clarionet players, etc. C, Nailsmiths'. 

 ( .. Hammermen's. C, Photographers', a ran 

 professional neurosis C, Pianists', a neurosis of the 

 hands and fingers of piano-players, 1 d by 



fatigue, pain, and weakness. The pain extends up 

 the arm to between the shoulders. C, Piano- 

 players'. See '., Pianists'. C, Saltatory. See 

 ■ ism. C, Sawyers', peculiar incoSrdin- 

 ated movements of the saw-arm and corresponding 

 side of the body, from excessive use. C, Scri- 

 veners'. Sc<- ('.. Writers'. C, Seamstresses', a 

 fessional neurosis consisting in a spastic condition 1 A 

 tin- flexors of the fingers from constantly plying tin- 

 needle. C, Shoemakers'. SeeSAoesalesmen'sDis, 

 C, Smiths'. See C, Hammermen's. C, Speakers'. 

 See Dysphorila spastica. C, Swimmers', a painful 

 cramp of the muscles of the calf of the leg of swimmers, 

 frequently causing death by drowning. C, Tailors', 

 a spasmodic affection of the muscles of the thumb, 

 forefinger, hands, and arms, sometimes occurring in 

 tailor-, from overwork. C, Telegraphers', a partial 

 paralysis of the muscles of the hand and lingers with 

 spasm, produced by fatigue from long-continued use 

 .■I Morse's instrument. C, Treadlers', one of the 

 professional neuroses ; it is met with in treadlers, and 

 consists in cramps of the leg-muscles from constant use 

 "I the machine. C, Violinists', a painful tramp 

 most common in the left shoulder of violinists ; it is due 

 to the peculiar position assumed in holding the violin. 

 C, Watchmakers', a cramp in which there is a 

 flexion of tin- metacarpophalangeal joints, with exten- 

 sion of the other joints of the hand. Also, an inability 

 to retain the glass in the eye-socket. C, Writers', 

 Scriveners' palsy; a difficulty in writing, due to spas 

 modi action of the muscles of the hand and arm, to 

 pain, i" tremulousness of these muscles, or to fati 



1 weakness of the extremity. Th< titute the 



four forms, spastic, neuralgic, tremulous, and paralytic. 



Crampton's Muscle. See- Muscles, Table of. C. 

 Operations. See Operations, Tabic of. 



Crampus [kram f -pus\ [!-]• An old name for a cramp, 

 or for any disease characterized by cramp-. 



Cranberry [kran' [ME., cranebery, a berry]. 



The acid iruit of Vaccinium /» and / '. macro- 



It i- a popular material for poultices, and is 



1 cure for carcinoma. Dnof. C.-tree. 



See Viburnum opulus. 



Crane-bark [kran'-bark). Sec Viburnum opulus. 



Crane's-bill Root. St re Geranium. 



Craniacromial ak-ro f -me-al\ [>. ■ nil; 



the point of the shoulder-blade]. Relating 

 to the 1 ranium and the acromion. 



Cranial [kra'-ne-al) \jtpaviov, the skull]. Relatin 

 the 1 ranium. C. Bosses, flat, bony elevation- oi 

 frontal imes seen at the angles 



mi. 1 ioi fi mtani 1 I he) are said to bi a pi 

 1 .1 hereditary syphilis. 



Craniectomy [kra neck' /,< n skull ; i/cropi/, 



out]. The surgical removal of strips or 

 pieces of the cranial bones. It is performed in cases 

 of m haly. 



