not everybody who can apply the bandage properly in such cases; for
if one shall bind the parts, as in other accidents about the ankle,
sometimes bringing a fold round the foot and sometimes round the tendon,
these turns leave out the heel, which is the seat of the contusion,
and thus there is danger that the os calcis may sphacelate; and if
this should take place, the impediment may endure for life and also
in all the other cases of sphacelus, not proceeding from such a cause
as this; as when, from being carelessly allowed to lie in a certain
position during confinement to bed, the heel becomes black, or when
a serious wound has occurred in the leg and it is long of healing,
and is connected with the heel, or when the same thing happens in
the thigh, or when in any disease a protracted decubitus takes place
on the back, in all such cases the sores are inveterate, troublesome,
and frequently break out again, unless particular attention be paid
to the cure, along with much rest, as in all the cases attended with
sphacelus. And cases of sphacelus connected with this cause, in addition
to other inconveniences, are attended with great danger to the whole
body. For they are apt to be attended with very acute fevers, of the
continual type, accompanied with tremblings, hiccup, aberration of
intellect, and which prove fatal within a few days: and there may
be lividities of bloody veins, with nausea, and gangrene from pressure;
these diseases may occur, besides the sphacelus. Those which have
been described are the most violent contusion; but in general the
contusions are mild, and no great care is required with regard to
the treatment, and yet it must be conducted properly. But when the
contusion appears to be severe, we must do as described above, making
many turns of the bandage around the heel, sometimes carrying it to
the extremity of the foot, sometimes to the middle, and sometimes
around the leg; and, in addition, all the surrounding parts are to
be bandaged in this direction and that, as formerly described; and
the compression should not be made strong, but we should make use
of many bandages, and it is better also to administer hellebore the
same day or on the morrow; and the bandages should be removed on the
third day and reapplied. And these are the symptoms by which we discover
whether the case will get worse or not: when the extravasated blood,
the lividities, and the surrounding parts become red and hard, there
is danger of an exacerbation. But if there be no fever, we must give
emetics, as has been said, and administer the other remedies which
are applicable when the fever is not of a continual type; but if continual
fever be present, we must not give strong medicines, but enjoin abstinence
from solid food and soups, and give water for drink, and not allow
wine but oxyglyky (a composition from vinegar and honey?). But if
the case be not going to get worse, the ecchymosed and livid parts,
and those surrounding them become greenish and not hard; for this
is a satisfactory proof in all cases of ecchymosis, that they are
not to get worse; but when lividity is complicated with hardness,
there is danger that the part may become blackened. And we must so
manage the foot as that it may be generally raised a little higher
than the rest of the body. Such a patient will get well in sixty days
if he keep quiet.


PART 12
The leg consists of two bones, of which the one is much more slender
than the other at one part, but not much more slender at another.
These are connected together at the foot, and form a common epiphysis,
but they are not united together along the line of the leg; and at
the thigh they are united together and form an epiphysis, and this
epiphysis has a diaphysis; but the other bone in a line with the little
toe is a little longer. Such is the nature of the bones of the leg.


PART 13
Sometimes the bones connected with the foot are displaced, sometimes

Page 7