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ARTICLE |

The Anatomy of the Peripheral Nerves.

JAMA. 1919;73(9):713. doi:10.1001/jama.1919.02610350061032.
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ABSTRACT

The percentage of peripheral nerve lesions among the casualties of the late war was so high that brief accounts of the anatomy, physiology and pathology of peripheral nerves fill a very important part in the present literature. In this book the author presents briefly the anatomy of the peripheral nerves for the use of students and surgeons, particularly for those engaged in military orthopedic work. The contents of the book consist of chapters on the anatomy of the peripheral nerves, the distribution of the spinal nerves, the sympathetic system, and the cranial nerves. It would have been better if some of the views of the author relative to regeneration and degeneration of nerves, in view of their unsettled nature, had been omitted from the text. It is by no means established that living fibers are found in the distal as well as the proximal portion of a divided nerve, and

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