Questioning routine amputations and presenting a limb-saving approach for war injuries.
This 18th‑century treatise argues that many amputations were unnecessary and shows conservative methods to save bones and restore function.
The work outlines a shift in thinking about battlefield wounds, offering practical guidance on when to preserve a limb and how to manage complex fractures, caries, and soft-tissue damage. It combines case observations with step‑by‑step techniques, focusing on careful wound management, bone care, and patient recovery.
Readers will encounter concrete procedures, cautions about harmful remedies, and the evolving view that amputation should not be the default response to every injury.
- How to assess when a limb can be saved rather than amputated.
- Techniques for exposing, cleaning, and stabilizing bone injuries to promote healing.
- Guidance on dressings, splints, and managing complications from long-term injuries.
- Historical context on medical debates and the progress of military surgery.
Ideal for readers of medical history, military surgery, and anyone curious about the evolution of limb-saving care.
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