Abstract
The order in which movement is restored to muscles paralyzed as the result of peripheral nerve lesions and the particular muscles involved in partial or dissociated nerve lesions have a sufficient constancy to attribute to each nerve a clinical individuality (Marie and Benisty 1 ). This analysis was made from a certain number of records which were competent, selected from a large amount of material. They may be divided into three groups: first, records of cases seen in France soon after injury; second, records of cases seen in U. S. General Hospital No. 28 a number of months after injury, and third, an analysis of motor disturbances in median nerve lesions from the whole material in the Surgeon-General's office. The records of the group studied at U. S. General Hospital No. 28 are especially adapted for this study, as muscle power was ascertained by dynamometric examination, described elsewhere (Pollock 2 ). ULNAR
Published Version
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