CHAPTER XXTV. 



WOUNDS. 



DEFIN [TION — CLASSIFICATION — INCISED — PUNCTURED — LACERATED — 



CONTUSED GUNSHOT POISONED TREATMENT OF WOUNDS 



SUTU RES COLLODION STYPTIC-COLLOID SHELLAC PASTE 



NON-INTEREERENCE. 



The term wound sij^niifies a recent solution of continuity of the 

 livini^^ tissues IihIucimI l)y some ineclianic.iil cause. 



Wuunds are classilied under the following heads: — Incised, 

 jpundurcd, lacerated, contused, gunshot, and poisoned. 



The various modes of healing are considered in the following 

 order, namely : — 1. ]*>y immediate union ; 2. By primary ad- 

 hesion ; 3. By granulation ; 4. By secondary adliesion, or the 

 union of granulations; 5. By healing under a scab. These five 

 modes are sometimes called: — 1. By the hrst intention; 2. By 

 the adhesive inllammation ; 3. By the second intention; 4. By 

 the third intention ; 5. Subcrustaceous cicatrisation. 



1. Incised wounds. — An incised wound is that made with a 

 clean-cutting instrument. The textures are divided evenly and 

 smoothly ; there is no tearing or bruising of parts, hence the 

 htTcmoiThage is at first much greater than in most other wounds. 

 If the wound has been i)arallel to the course of the muscular 

 fibres of the part, there is no gaping of the edges so long as 

 the part is lve])t in ])osition ; but if the cut be across the direc- 

 tion of the muscular libres, or transverse to the axis of a limb, 

 the wound will be drawn apart, the deep parts more so than 

 the superficial, owing to the retraction of the divided muscular 

 fibres, and a cavity formed in which blood and pus are apt to 

 collect and retard the progress of repair. 



The treatment of this sort of wound is very simple, but it 

 comprehends four important indications, namely — 1. To arrest 



