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INCARCERATED DIAPHRAGMATIC HERNIA IN AN INFANT, WITH OPERATION AND RECOVERY

Ralph B. Bettman, M.D.; Julius H. Hess, M.D.
JAMA. 1929;92(24):2014-2016. doi:10.1001/jama.1929.92700500001009.
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ABSTRACT

A girl, aged 3½ months, was referred to the pediatric service of one of us, with the following history: Since birth the infant had had occasional attacks of screaming, which had lasted from a few minutes to half a day and which were diagnosed as colic. Four days before admission the child awakened in the middle of the night, screaming as if in pain. The attack continued the rest of the night. The child did not vomit but refused all food, and the mother noticed that she "looked blue." The next day the child was better but would not nurse. A physician was called, who ordered the child sent to a hospital, where a roentgenogram was taken and a diagnosis of "diaphragmatic hernia" was made. The physician told the parents that they might as well take the child home again "because she was sure to die and an

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