Acute Head Injury. By JOSEPH P. EVANS, M.D., most part badly reproduced and some are quite useless, Ph.D., Associate Professor of Surgery, University of e.g., Figs. 20.02 and 20.03 in which bullets are supposed to Cincinnati College of Medicine, Ohio. Pp. I 16 + v. be shown within the heart. No doubt in the next edition
- Illinois : Charles C. Thomas. (Oxford : this defect will be corrected ; it is certain that a second Blackwell Scientific Publications Ltd.) 16s. 6d. edition will soon be needed for such a sound and T~~~ small monograph of just over a hundred pages gives authoritative exposition of such an important subject. a concise description of the diagnosis and treatment of The chapter on injuries to the heart might also, with acute head injuries.
is divided into four definite advantage, be made somewhat fuller. l'he principles parts : scalp injuries, skull fractures, meningeal haemor-and results of surgical treatment of arteriovenous rhaae in its various forms. and cerebral trauma.
?neurysm shquld also be more accurately and critically