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bread, of wheat or rye, cold, and at least one day old, with good
butter, moderate tea, and meat, with potatoes or beans once a
day. She must not sleep upon a feather bed, nor yet in a heated
room; is to wear flannel, and over the affected joint and limb
flannels of double thickness; to apply close over the painful
joint at bed time a piece of oiled silk or rubber cloth, upon the
under side of which is spread a drachm or two of opium that
has been rubbed up very soft in a few drops of rum and hot
water; to shock the spine by suddenly applying at every bed
time a large towel squeezed out in very cold water, which is
quickly passed a few times up and down the whole spine and
back, and then is to be as quickly wiped dry and got into bed
for the night.
Miss S. was positively encouraged that she should be ben-
efited, and the electric treatments were commenced, with the
regimen as above. As the pelvis had been tilted over for about
twenty years, assimilating and exaggerating the position as-
sumed in true hip disease, there was double curvature of the
spine from the unequal action of the muscles of the back;
besides, the left glutei could be felt in strong irritative, wavy
contractions, and the nates, instead of being on that side as on
the sound side, was very protuberant; therefore the first busi-
ness was to balance up the action of the muscles of the back
and loins. The first week was devoted to this, using the pri-
mary current of galvanism. Next, the circle treatment was
instituted over the great sciatic nerve, just as employed in sci-
atica or neuralgia, observing the same rules and precautions.
In three months, this lady went to church regularly, and took
her daily promenade in the Mall. The atrophy and coldness
below the knee was replaced with more habitual warmth, flesh
color, and plumpness; the contraction of the hamstrings so
much overcome that a yardstick laid upon the knee pan would
touch the upper end of the rectus femoris, while the lower end
of the stick would rest upon the front of the ankle above the
instep. Instead of the toes now pointing to the ground, she
wore a steel spring high shoe, with her little foot nearly level,
and she often walks without a cane, or even a perceptible limp-