INDEX TO VOLUME II 



565 



Cautery, actual (co)itniited) : 

 cure of omalgia by, 273' 374- 

 cure of disease of shoulder-joint by, 374, 375. 

 cure of disease of wrist-joint by, 375, 376. 

 disease between atlas and axis benefited by, ^^6, 



377- 

 counter-irritation with, introduced into Great 



Britain by Symc, ^yy. 

 Cells : proliferation of, as cause of pus formation, 



542. 

 Celsus : his teaching on amputation, 378. 



recommended removal of limb through healthy 



tissues, 2/S. 

 use of hgature for arrest of haemorrhage after 



amputation, 379. 

 on arrest of haemorrhage, 379 {footnote). 

 on means of arrest of haemorrhage, 379 (footnote). 

 aimed at primary union after amputation, 379 



(footnote). 

 neglect of his method of amputation and of 

 treating wounds in Middle Ages, 379 (footnote). 

 his method of amputation revived by Louis, 

 382. 

 Cement, antiseptic : attempts to obtain, yj. 

 Cerebro-spinal axis : shown by experiments to 

 preside over contractions of arteries of foot in 

 frog, 529, 530. 

 Chassaignac : caoutchouc drainage tube, 443. 

 Charitc Hospital, Berlin : since introduction of 

 antiseptic treatment pyaemia abolished, hos- 

 pital gangrene uncommon and erysipelas very 

 rare and mild, 252. 

 Charpie made of old rags : made antiseptic, 306. 

 Cha\'asse : report on result of case in which patella 



was wired for recent transverse fracture, 463. 

 Cheatle, G. Lcnthal : granulating wounds in South 

 Africa behaved better with cyanide dressing 

 than with iodoform, 331 (footnote). 

 Cheese-mites do not originate spontaneously, 482, 



483- 



Cheselden: amputation bv 'double incision', ^Sz 

 (and footnote). 



Chest : external wound penetrating, causes sup- 

 purative pleurisy, 3. 



Chevreul : experiment illustrating germ theory of 

 putrefaction, 54 ; Pasteur's experiments on 

 organisms in air, with flask with bent neck, 

 attributed by him to, 485 (footnote). 



Cheyne, W. Watson : species of micrococci shown 



by, to occur very frequently in cases treated 



antiseptically without any interference with 



aseptic progress, 103. 



action of tissues on catgut used as a drain, 116. 



no organisms found in discharges of carbolic acid 



gauze dressing changed daily, 294. 

 experiments on germicidal power of cyanide of 

 mercury. 313. 



Cliiene, John: observation of secondary blood clot 

 in hollow wound becoming organized on top 

 of first, 2O8 ; catgut drain, 444. 



Chloride of aluminium. See .Vluminium. 



Chloride of zinc. See Zinc. 



Chlorine gas : saturated .solution of, applied to 

 wound wiiich iiad beconie seat of putrefaction, 



155- 

 diffused through cotton wool as an antiseptic 

 dressing, 176. 

 Chlorine water : as an antiseptic wash for raw 

 surfaces, 180. 



Chloroform as anaesthetic : introduced by J. ^ . 

 Simpson, 492. 

 rightly administered safer than ether, 492 ; Edin- 

 burgh method of administering, 431 (and foot- 

 note) ; amputation of thigh under, witnessed 

 by author, 491. 

 Cholera microbe. See Microbe. 

 Cholera des ponies, 504. 



Chopart's amputation through tarsus, 404. 

 Chromic acid: catgut prepared with, iii. 



with carbolic acid in preparation of catgut liga- 

 ture, 112; details of method, 113. 

 Chromic catgut. See Catgut. 



Chromium, sulphate of : in preparation of catgut, 

 119. 

 its untrustworthiness as a germicide removed by 



addition of corrosive sublimate, 119. 

 variations in quality of, 119. 

 how this is remedied, 119. 



great care required in preparation and preserva- 

 tion of, 1 19 (footnote). 

 Cicatrix : contracted, deformity from, treated anti- 

 septically, 200. 

 contraction of, counteracted by elastic traction 

 with india rubber, 201. 

 Cicatrization : with suppuration beneath a piece of 

 tin — a novel mode of heahng by scabbing, ^2. 

 interfered with by carbolic acid acting directly 

 on wound, 184 ; therefore 'protective ' neces- 

 sary, 184. 

 without granulation under antiseptic dressing, 

 265. 

 Cilia on epithelium of frog's tongue: independent 



motion of 



' :>-/ 



,528. 



effect of heat on, 527, -,28. 



Ciliated cells on surface of frog's tongue, 512. 



effects of stimulation and irritation on them, 

 512. 



CiUated epithelium cells: vital functions suspended 

 in, by injurious agencies, 528. 



Cleanliness : distinction between antisepsis and, 

 254. 



Cleanliness, surgical and aesthetic : distinction 

 between, 291. 



Clinical surger3\ See Surgery. 



Clutton : unsuccessful case of hgature of external 

 iUac artery with silk under antiseptic system, 

 102. 



Coats, James : and antiseptic treatment, 128. 

 compound dislocation of ankle treated antisep- 

 tically, 141. 



Coats, Joseph : calls attention to fact that carbolic 

 acid does not pass so readily through oiled 

 silk as through gutta percha. 145. 



Cohnhcim : emigration of leucocytes in inflamma- 

 tion, 2,Z3' 334. 

 his observation of passage of white corpuscles 

 through walls of vessels into surrounding 

 tissues in inflammatory conditions. 513. 

 emigration of leucocytes. 542. 

 not the exclusive mode of pus formation, 542. 



Colon : vibrios in abscess in vicinity of, 42 (footnote). 



' Comma bacillus ', ^o^ 



COMPOUND DISLOCATION OF ANKl.L. \\ ITII 

 OTHER INH'RIES. RICMAKKS ON A 

 CAS1-: OF. il.l.LSTRATING THE ANTI- 

 Si: I'lTC SYSTEM OF TREATMENT (1S70), 



K^7- 

 Compound dislocation. See Dislocation. 



