A new contribution to the history and etiology of spondyl-olisthesis / by Franz Ludwig Neugebauer ; translated by Fancourt Barnes.
- Neugebauer, Franz Ludwig, 1856-1914.
- Date:
- 1888
Licence: Public Domain Mark
Credit: A new contribution to the history and etiology of spondyl-olisthesis / by Franz Ludwig Neugebauer ; translated by Fancourt Barnes. Source: Wellcome Collection.
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No text description is available for this image
No text description is available for this image
No text description is available for this image![Fig. 22. Fig. 22.—Internai view of the left half of the lumbar sacral parta of the Zurich pelvis, from a médian section (from before backwards) by a saw. III, IV, V, Bodies of third, fourth, and fifth lumbar vetebræ. oIII, oIV, oV, and oVI, The corresponding intervertébral foramina. o First anterior sacral foramen. ff Fourth and fifth lumbar spines the former has slipped forwards, so that the latter forms a solitary projection (compare Fr. Billeter, “Ein neuer Fall von hoch gradiger Spondyl-olisthesis des Beckens.” Mang. Diss., Zurich, 1862. Tafel III.). a Superior artieular process 1 , b Inferior „ „ j of the fifth lumbar vertebra. b' Inferior articulai- process of the fourth lumbar vertebra. n Exposed upper surface of the body of the first sacral vertebra. Isolated spikes of bone (compare i in figs. 20 and 21). No. 63. Indicated spondyl-olisthesis interarticularis on the right arch of the second lumbar vertebra in the spinal column of a child two or three years old [specimen in spirit] {ibidem). No. 61.—Bilateral of the fifth lumbar vertebra of a female pelvis in the Obstétrical Collection at Basic (from a woman with a funnel-shaped pelvis, who, a primipara 4-> years of âge, after the delivery with perforation of the head of the child, died on 7th February, 1880). (See Journal, No. G8, 1880.) No. 65.—Bilateral of a lumbar vertebra.](https://iiif.wellcomecollection.org/image/b28710460_0059.jp2/full/800%2C/0/default.jpg)