64 results on '"Anatomists history"'
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2. William Hunter's aristocratic post mortems.
- Author
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McDonald SW
- Subjects
- History, 18th Century, Humans, Scotland, Anatomists history, Dissection history, Forensic Medicine history, Obstetrics history, Pathologists history
- Abstract
William Hunter's writings, lectures and his collection of circa 1,400 pathological specimens at the University of Glasgow show that, within the scientific limitations of the 18th Century, he had a sound grasp of the significance of morbid anatomical appearances. Unlike John Hunter's collection at the Royal College of Surgeons of England, few of the Hunterian specimens at Glasgow have an accompanying case history. Within the Special Collections at the Glasgow University Library are a small number of post mortem reports, including four involving William Hunter's aristocratic patients. This article explores these patient cases, and also the only instance recorded by John Hunter of William working with him on a post mortem of an aristocrat, that of the Marquis of Rockingham, Prime Minister, who died in 1782. The study aims to better understand William Hunter's medical practice and his professional connections with other practitioners. The post mortem examinations were carried out by a surgeon/anatomist and observed by the patient's physician(s). For aristocratic post mortems, those attending were senior and well-established practitioners. The notes made were not particularly detailed. The reports show clearly that William Hunter's practice, in the 1760s at least, was not confined to midwifery., (© 2021 American Association of Clinical Anatomists.)
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
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3. Jacob Winslow (1669-1760): The surprising legacy of an anatomist.
- Author
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Saad TC
- Subjects
- Denmark, France, History, 17th Century, History, 18th Century, Anatomists history
- Abstract
Jacob Winslow (1669-1760), a celebrated anatomist in his day, made his name publishing numerous medical treatises and writing the four-volume Anatomical exposition of the structure of the human body . He gives his name to the foramen of Winslow, and is credited with numerous significant findings in neuroanatomy and biomechanics. His life is characterised by meticulous devotion to his discipline and divided by a torturous religious conversion. In addition to his contributions to anatomy, he is famously remembered for his treatise on the uncertainty of the signs of death, which has influenced practices surrounding death down to the present day.
- Published
- 2021
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4. The life and legacy of William Keiller (1861-1931), anatomist, artist and curator.
- Author
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Summerly P and Macintyre I
- Subjects
- History, 19th Century, History, 20th Century, Scotland, Texas, Anatomists history, Art history, Museums history, Schools, Medical history
- Abstract
After graduating in medicine from the Edinburgh Extramural School of Medicine, William Keiller trained in obstetrics and became anatomy lecturer at the Edinburgh College of Medicine for Women, where he successfully devised and developed an anatomical curriculum. In 1891, Keiller was appointed as the Professor of anatomy at the state medical department of the University of Texas, at the age of 30. He built up a nationally recognised anatomy department, museum and teaching curriculum informed by his experience in Edinburgh. Keiller left the University of Texas Medical Branch at Galveston a rich legacy, including anatomical specimens and drawings.
- Published
- 2021
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5. Anatomy mourns the loss of her teacher, Paolo Mascagni.
- Author
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Orsini D and Aglianò M
- Subjects
- History, 18th Century, History, 19th Century, Italy, Anatomists history, Anatomy history
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
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6. Charles Bell (1774-1842) and Natural Theology.
- Author
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Hughes S and Gardner-Thorpe C
- Subjects
- History, 18th Century, History, 19th Century, London, Scotland, Anatomists history, Art history, Surgeons history, Theology history
- Abstract
Sir Charles Bell, a 19th century surgeon, anatomist and artist, was heavily influenced by the religious practice of Natural Theology, a belief which implied that the world is created by an Intelligent Designer. In the 18th century, William Paley, later Rector of Bishop Wearmouth, wrote the seminal book about Natural Theology. Charles Bell who practised in London and Edinburgh used his artistic skills to underline his teaching of anatomy and surgery. Later, Bell wrote one of the eight Bridgewater Treatises on the Hand. Bell went on to illustrate the final edition of Paley's Natural Theology in which he demonstrated that proof of Design were to be found in the animal frame, reflecting his earlier work on art and human structure. It is concluded that Charles Bell and William Paley's ideals were in harmony with each other, holding the same belief about Creation. This paper argues that Bell's understanding and devotion to Natural Theology allowed him to accurately explain function, realism and expression in the human body, all revealing the direct influence of the Divine Creator.
- Published
- 2020
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7. William Rutherford Sanders (1828-1881), anatomist, physician, linguist and museum conservator.
- Author
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Gardner D
- Subjects
- France, History, 19th Century, Scotland, Anatomists history, Linguistics history, Museums history, Physicians history
- Abstract
William Rutherford Sanders spent a childhood and early student days divided between Edinburgh and Montpelier, France before graduating in Medicine in Edinburgh. An early interest in the spleen was encouraged by a two-year period in Europe where he became familiar with the work of Helmholtz, Bernard and Henle. Returning to Edinburgh, his growing experience led to the position of assistant in the Infirmary pathology department. He conducted classes in the University of Edinburgh and on behalf of the Royal Colleges became familiar with the museum of the Royal College of Surgeons where he was chosen as Conservator in 1853. Criticised by 20th century historians for concentrating on verbal teaching rather than on the conservation of the museum, Sanders became a consultant physician to the Royal Infirmary in 1861 and in 1869 Professor of General Pathology. Throughout these years, Sanders gave as much time as possible to the study of the structure and function of the spleen and to neurological disorders such as hemiplegia. His later life was interrupted by a series of illnesses commencing with an abdominal abscess. A prolonged convalescence allowed the resumption of work but deranged vision and hemiplegia preceded his death on 18 February 1881.
- Published
- 2020
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8. John Hunter and the 'Healing Window' in the church of St Mary Abbots, Kensington, London.
- Author
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McHardy G
- Subjects
- England, History, 18th Century, History, 19th Century, London, Anatomists history, Burial history, Surgeons history
- Abstract
During research into the reinterment in 1859 of John Hunter's remains in Westminster Abbey, it was learnt that there was 'a window to Hunter's memory' in St Mary Abbots church, Kensington, London. Research into that window shows that it in fact commemorates Hunter's residence within the parish, and that also of two other Kensington worthies. Their place of residence is identified, Hunter's is illustrated and a nice connexion is found with a window in Gloucester cathedral in memory of Drs Jenner and Baron.
- Published
- 2020
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9. John Irvine Hunter (1898-1924): Australian Anatomist and Medical Educator.
- Author
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Barrett S and Štrkalj G
- Subjects
- Anthropology history, Australia, History, 19th Century, History, 20th Century, Humans, Anatomists history, Anatomy, Education, Medical history, Faculty, Medical, Physiology
- Abstract
This paper focuses on the short, but brilliant career of the Australian anatomist and medical educator, John Irvine Hunter. Hunter's biography is presented within the context of the early twentieth century anatomy and medical education. John Irvine Hunter was not only the youngest ever Professor of Anatomy at the University of Sydney, but he was also undeniably brilliant with regard to teaching and researching anatomy, physiology and anthropology. While his short career answered many questions in these fields, it raised more questions regarding what Hunter may have accomplished if only he had been given the chance. These unanswered questions have spawned what we now affectionately refer to as the "Hunter Legend". His most ambitious work on the dual innervation of striated muscle, while eventually disproven, formed an important stepping-stone in the bridging of anatomy and physiology. His thought-provoking concepts were viewed with much intrigue, and at the time were very well received. CONCLUSION: Hunter remains one of the most prominent and inspiring figures in the history of Australian anatomy and medicine., (Copyright © 2020 by Academy of Sciences and Arts of Bosnia and Herzegovina.)
- Published
- 2020
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10. Trnka Vaclav - Central European Anatomist and Medical Polymath of the Eighteenth Century.
- Author
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Kachlik D, Varga I, Zupanic J, and Szekely AD
- Subjects
- Czech Republic, Europe, History, 18th Century, Humans, Hungary, Slovakia, Anatomists history
- Abstract
Vaclav Trnka from Křovice (1739-1791, in Latin: Wenzel Trnka Krzowitz) was a remarkable physician whose life serves as an example in the history of medicine by connecting major capital cities of Central Europe. In view of current geographical layout, he was born and brought up in the Czech Republic, graduated from University of Vienna in Austria, and was appointed Professor of the Anatomy at the newly established Faculty of Medicine of University of Nagyszombat, presently Trnava in Slovak Republic. When the University moved to Buda and later to Pest (today Budapest, Hungary), he was the first educator to introduce anatomy as a medical subject to be taught in a Hungarian medical school. He also was elected the Dean of Faculty of Medicine three times and in 1786-1787 he acted as Rector of then the Royal University of Pest. During his life, he published twenty-seven monographs dealing with different areas of clinical medicine, such as malaria (intermittent fever), diabetes, and rickets. Based on these monographs we can proclaim that Václav Trnka was a co-founder of modern infectology, diabetology and ophthalmology in Central Europe. Nowadays, artificial intelligence and bioinformatics are inseparable parts of modern health care system which help the transformation of big data into valuable knowledge. In the 18th century, Professor Trnka owned more than 3,000 scientific books and had natural, innate intelligence and wisdom which made him a real "medical polymath". As a musician, Trnka also composed sixty-one canons, two of them long wrongly considered as Mozart's work. Despite the fact that Trnka is considered to be the founder of Hungarian anatomy education and a major medical figure of the eighteenth century Central Europe, no internationally acclaimed biographical record of his life or work has so far been published in English. Therefore, we would like to reintroduce Václav Trnka both as an anatomist and medical polymath, and to give an overview of the early days of anatomy teaching in present-day Slovakia and Hungary (Fig. 1, Ref. 27). Keywords: Trnka from Křovice, anatomist, medical polymath, history of medicine.
- Published
- 2020
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11. Iulius Casserius, a relatively underestimated anatomist: his contributions to brain's anatomy.
- Author
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Paraskevas G, Koutsouflianiotis K, Iliou K, and Noussios G
- Subjects
- History, 15th Century, History, Medieval, Humans, Anatomists history, Neuroanatomy history
- Abstract
Iulius Casserius is to be remembered for his excellent contributions in Anatomy and especially in Neuroanatomy. His persistent and meticulous scientific anatomical work resulted in the first record of the arterial circle of the brain 37 years before the comprehensive description by Thomas Willis. Casserius' great interest in the human brain led him to the discovery of plenty anatomical structures before their official documentation. Casserius was an excellent teacher and anatomist of a humble origin, who managed to be distinguished among other famous physicians of his era.
- Published
- 2019
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12. Josias Weitbrecht, the founder of syndesmology, and the history of the retinacula of Weitbrecht.
- Author
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Bartoníček J and Naňka O
- Subjects
- Hip Joint anatomy & histology, History, 18th Century, History, 19th Century, Humans, Joint Capsule anatomy & histology, Male, Anatomists history, Anatomy history, Ligaments anatomy & histology, Medical Illustration history, Textbooks as Topic history
- Abstract
"Syndesmologia siue historia ligamentorum corporis humani", published in 1742 by a German anatomist Josias Weitbrecht (1702-1747), who for a long time lived and worked in St. Petersburg, is the first comprehensive textbook of syndesmology. The accuracy and quality of the accompanying illustrations are fascinating, even after almost 300 years. Weitbrecht was also the first to describe the synovial folds of the hip joint, later named after him as the retinacula of Weitbrecht. This eponym appeared in the first half of the nineteenth century in the studies of femoral neck fractures published in the UK. In the study of syndesmology, Weitbrecht was followed by a number of outstanding authors of that time, such as Meckel, Barkow, Arnold, Henle, Humphry and Fick.
- Published
- 2019
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13. The Anatomy of Papal Tiara: A Story About Popes' Contribution and Protection of Anatomists.
- Author
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Cucu AI, Costea CF, Perciaccante A, Turliuc S, Ciocoiu M, and Turliuc MD
- Subjects
- History, Medieval, Humans, Anatomists history, Anatomy history, Catholicism, Physicians
- Abstract
Beginning with the thirteenth century, the papacy has exerted an important role in the development of anatomy and medical sciences through the protection and support provided to anatomists, who were in most cases the personal physicians of the popes as well. The work is intended to be a lesson of anatomy of Papal tiara, presenting the most important contributing popes, the anatomists-physicians whom they supported and protected and the relations between papacy and medical sciences.
- Published
- 2019
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14. Antoine Ferrein (1693-1769)-His Life and Contribution to Anatomy and Physiology: The Description of the Vocal Chords and Their Function.
- Author
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Markatos K, Karamanou M, Tsekouras K, Damaskos C, Garmpis N, and Androutsos G
- Subjects
- Books history, France, History, 17th Century, History, 18th Century, Humans, Anatomists history, Physiology history
- Abstract
The purpose of this study is to summarize the life and work of the French anatomist and surgeon Antoine Ferrein (1693-1769). Ferrein made an impact in the history of anatomy and physiology through his work and especially with the description of phonation, renal anatomy, and liver and biliary structure. He also made an impact on ophthalmology with the description of the eyelid and its diseases. After a thorough review of the literature, we present in this review his life and his main discoveries with special emphasis on the anatomic description of the vocal chords resembling the chords of a violin tempered by the air exhaled from the lungs and how the physiology of phonation and the surgery of the larynx were revolutionized after that.
- Published
- 2019
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15. Leonardo da Vinci - ingenious anatomist: 500 years since the death of the famous erudite.
- Author
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Săceleanu MV, Mohan AG, Marinescu AA, Marinescu A, and Ciurea AV
- Subjects
- Animals, History, 15th Century, History, 16th Century, Humans, Anatomists history
- Abstract
Born on April 15, 1452, in a modest family in a hamlet from Tuscany, Leonardo da Vinci became the unassailable icon of Renaissance. Pushed throughout his entire life by his relentless curiosity, he was a painter, draughtsman, sculptor, poet, musician, writer, engineer, stage designer, architect, physicist, astronomer, cartographer and anatomist. His earliest surviving anatomical drawings (ca. 1485-1493) include studies of the skull, meninges, brain and cerebral ventricles. He was the first to pith a frog, concluding that piercing the spinal medulla will result in immediate death - a completely unexpected result in that era. In an effort to better understand the origins of the sensory and motor functions of the brain - which at the time was believed to be in the ventricles - he developed a method of injecting hot wax into the ventricles of an ox. He was the first to correctly describe the four ventricles of the brain. Thus, he circumvented a 16 century-long flaw in the dissection technique, which did not allow the correct study of the shape of the ventricles - decapitation and drainage of fluids before study. Even though he was never formally educated in the study of medicine, his work continues to inspire us today, 500 years after his death.
- Published
- 2019
16. Neuronomy, education, and outreach in neuroscience: A historical case study of Burt Green Wilder.
- Author
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Weiner KS
- Subjects
- History, 19th Century, History, 20th Century, Humans, Male, United States, Anatomists history, Brain physiology, Neuroanatomy history
- Abstract
Burt Green Wilder (1841-1925) was a pioneering naturalist and anatomist who is historically known for his brain collection and for his contributions to neuroanatomical nomenclature. During his 42-year career, Wilder also used brain measurements for education and outreach, especially in regard to issues of race and gender. Additionally, Wilder influenced neuroscience education and acted as a scientific liaison to the public. For example, he designed early implementations of the sheep brain dissections that are still being conducted today, as well as likely conducted the first "Brain Day." This article reviews each of these topics, as well as others, with the aim of accurately placing Wilder in the history of neuroscience as a naturalist and anatomist who, among other achievements, pioneered the use of brain measurements for education and outreach.
- Published
- 2019
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17. Dr William Hunter FRS FSA (1718-1783): Friend and foe.
- Author
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Hunting P
- Subjects
- History, 18th Century, Scotland, Anatomists history, Physicians history
- Published
- 2018
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18. The influence of ancient Greek thought on fifteenth century anatomy: Galenic influence and Leonardo da Vinci.
- Author
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Tubbs RI, Gonzales J, Iwanaga J, Loukas M, Oskouian RJ, and Tubbs RS
- Subjects
- Famous Persons, Greece, History, 15th Century, History, Ancient, History, Medieval, Humans, Medical Illustration history, Anatomists history, Anatomy, Artistic history
- Abstract
Leonardo da Vinci (1452-1519) can be called one of the earliest contributors to the history of anatomy and, by extension, the study of medicine. He may have even overshadowed Andreas Vesalius (1514-1564), the so-called founder of human anatomy, if his works had been published within his lifetime. While some of the best illustrations of their time, with our modern knowledge of anatomy, it is clear that many of da Vinci's depictions of human anatomy are inaccurate. However, he also made significant discoveries in anatomy and remarkable predictions of facts he could not yet discover with the technology available to him. Additionally, da Vinci was largely influenced by Greek anatomists, as indicated from his ideas about anatomical structure. In this historical review, we describe da Vinci's history, influences, and discoveries in anatomical research and his depictions and errors with regards to the musculoskeletal system, cardiovascular system, nervous system, and other organs.
- Published
- 2018
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19. "Academic racism" and the neglected scholarship of the anatomist M. Wharton Young, MD, PhD (1904-1986).
- Author
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Heywood P
- Subjects
- Academic Success, District of Columbia, History, 20th Century, South Carolina, Anatomists history, Racism history
- Abstract
Moses Wharton Young, MD, PhD (1904-1986), was an African American Professor of Neuroanatomy at Howard University College of Medicine from 1934 to 1973, during which time he authored about 100 publications on topics that included baldness, asthma, glaucoma, and, most importantly, the structure and function of the inner ear and the pathophysiology of blast injuries. Much of Young's research was ignored during his lifetime, raising the question whether this professional neglect was an instance of "academic racism."
- Published
- 2018
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20. Leonardo da Vinci (1452-1519) and his depictions of the human spine.
- Author
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Bowen G, Gonzales J, Iwanaga J, Fisahn C, Loukas M, Oskouian RJ, and Tubbs RS
- Subjects
- History, 15th Century, History, 16th Century, Humans, Anatomists history, Famous Persons, Medical Illustration history, Spine anatomy & histology
- Abstract
Introduction: Few individuals in history have exerted so great an influence and made such extensive contributions to so many disciplines as Leonardo da Vinci. Da Vinci's inquisitive, experimental mentality led him to many discoveries, such as spinal cord function and the proper anatomy of several organ systems. Respected not only as an artist but also as an anatomist, he made many significant contributions to the field., Conclusions: This article explores da Vinci's drawings, in relation to the anatomy of the human spine.
- Published
- 2017
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21. Anecdotes to the life and times of Sir Richard Owen (1804-1892) in Lancaster.
- Author
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Wessels Q and Taylor AM
- Subjects
- Dissection, England, History, 19th Century, Anatomists history, Sanitation history
- Abstract
Sir Richard Owen, a Lancastrian, was a prominent biologist, comparative anatomist, geologist, palaeontologist and known for coining the term dinosaur. His expertise in anatomical dissection proved to be one of his biggest assets and aided his career progression at the Royal College of Surgeons and the Zoological Society. Owen's apprenticeship in Lancaster helped him to gain expertise in anatomy and anatomical dissection. The authors aim to provide some novel contextual background to his childhood in Lancaster, his affection for his hometown and his contribution to Lancaster's sanitary reform. The latter aspect of his scientific accomplishments is typically overlooked.
- Published
- 2017
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22. James Bell Pettigrew (1832-1908) MD, LLD, FRS, comparative anatomist, physiologist and aerobiologist.
- Author
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Gardner D
- Subjects
- Animals, History, 19th Century, History, 20th Century, London, Publishing, Schools, Medical, Anatomists history
- Abstract
After leaving Glasgow University, Pettigrew joined the Edinburgh Medical School in 1856. Professor Goodsir determined Pettigrew's entire future by awarding him the Anatomy Gold Medal for an essay on cardiac muscle. The essay was accompanied by dissections of such high quality that they led to the Croonian Lecture of the Royal Society of London in 1860. After graduating, Pettigrew's time as House Surgeon to James Syme was followed by a position in the Hunterian Museum, London. Intensive studies of urinary and alimentary muscle, and observations of insects and animals, with lectures on flight to distinguished societies, contributed to disabling illness and a long convalescence but in 1869 Pettigrew became Conservator of the Royal College of Surgeons of Edinburgh and then Pathologist to the Royal Infirmary of Edinburgh. The publication of Physiology of the Circulation and of Animal Locomotion, with its emphasis on aeronautics, ensured international fame. Fellowship of both London and Edinburgh Royal Societies was another factor contributing to Pettigrew's election to the Chandos Chair at St Andrews University in 1875. The construction and abortive flying of a motor-driven aeroplane came near the end of his life and Pettigrew gave his remaining years to completing his monumental Design in Nature.
- Published
- 2017
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23. Leonardo da Vinci: engineer, bioengineer, anatomist, and artist.
- Author
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West JB
- Subjects
- History, 15th Century, Humans, Physiology, Anatomists history, Art history, Bioengineering history
- Abstract
Leonardo da Vinci (1452-1519) enjoys a reputation as one of the most talented people of all time in the history of science and the arts. However, little attention has been given to his contributions to physiology. One of his main interests was engineering, and he was fascinated by structural problems and the flow patterns of liquids. He also produced a large number of ingenious designs for warfare and a variety of highly original flying machines. But of particular interest to us are his contributions to bioengineering and how he used his knowledge of basic physical principles to throw light on physiological function. For example, he produced new insights into the mechanics of breathing including the action of the ribs and diaphragm. He was the first person to understand the different roles of the internal and external intercostal muscles. He had novel ideas about the airways including the mode of airflow in them. He also worked on the cardiovascular system and had a special interest in the pulmonary circulation. But, interestingly, he was not able to completely divorce his views from those of Galen, in that although he could not see pores in the interventricular septum of the heart, one of his drawings included them. Leonardo was a talented anatomist who made many striking drawings of the human body. Finally, his reputation for many people is based on his paintings including the Mona Lisa that apparently attracts more viewers than any other painting in the world., (Copyright © 2017 the American Physiological Society.)
- Published
- 2017
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24. The Science of Anatomy: A historical timeline.
- Author
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Habbal O
- Subjects
- History, 15th Century, History, 16th Century, History, 17th Century, History, 18th Century, History, 19th Century, History, 20th Century, History, Ancient, History, Medieval, Humans, Anatomists history, Anatomy history, Medical Illustration history
- Published
- 2017
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25. The first descriptions of various anatomical structures and embryological remnants of the heart: A systematic overview.
- Author
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Paraskevas G, Koutsouflianiotis K, and Iliou K
- Subjects
- Atrial Septum anatomy & histology, History, 15th Century, History, 16th Century, History, 17th Century, History, 18th Century, History, 19th Century, History, 20th Century, History, Ancient, History, Medieval, Humans, Papillary Muscles anatomy & histology, Anatomists history, Heart Atria anatomy & histology, Heart Valves anatomy & histology, Heart Ventricles anatomy & histology
- Abstract
In the present study a brief overview of the history regarding the development of the knowledge of the macroscopic and microscopic anatomical elements of the heart along with some embryological remnants of the heart has been conducted. The evolution of the awareness as regards the various anatomical and embryonic structures of the heart began from Greek medico-philosophers, such as Hippocrates, Herophilus, Erasistratus and Galen, however, such knowledge was enpowered from the meticulous study of philosophers and physicians until the era of modern anatomy. In specific, the following anatomical and embryological structures are displayed: aortic and pulmonary valve, auricles, bundle of Kent, cardiac nerves, conduction system of the heart, ductus arteriosus, intervenous tubercle of Lower, left atrial oblique vein and ligament of Marshall, limbus of fossa ovalis, mitral and tricuspid valve, nodes or nodules of Arantius, ovale foramen, septomarginal trabecula, sinus of Valsava, small cardiac veins or vessels of Thebesius, tendinous chordae and papillary muscles, tendon of the valve of the inferior vena cava and triangle of Koch, valve of the coronary sinus, valve of the inferior vena cava., (Copyright © 2016 Elsevier Ireland Ltd. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2017
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26. Vesalius, What have you to do with Pontus?
- Author
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Musajo-Somma A
- Subjects
- Belgium, Georgia (Republic), History, 16th Century, Russia, Ukraine, Anatomists history, Colchicum, Textbooks as Topic history
- Abstract
The challenge to dig in the interplayed aspects linking the Pontus area to the innovative Flemish anatomist Andreas Vesalius (1514-1564) is offered by many suggestions and figures language of metaphor, as well as artistic expressions drawn in this "papers" coupled with moments of his personal and professional life.
- Published
- 2016
27. Dr Eugenia Rose Aylmer Cooper (1898-1991): Manchester's renowned female anatomist and neurohistologist.
- Author
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Shreeve DR
- Subjects
- England, History, 20th Century, Lawyers history, Pharmacology history, Anatomists history, Histology history, Neurosciences history
- Abstract
Having excelled in histology, Dr Eugenia Cooper, following graduation in medicine in Manchester, embarked on a career spanning 44 years in anatomy and histology at Manchester University. Her inimitable character was readily remembered by those she had taught. She was the first female graduate to gain an MD with gold medal for her thesis on the histology of the endocrine organs. However, her main study was the development of the human brainstem from the early weeks of gestation, which remains the basis for anatomical understanding today. More controversial was her theory on circulation and absorption of the cerebrospinal fluid. On retiring as Reader in Histology, she expressed disappointment at not being appointed a professor, which she considered was due to her gender. Possibly to compensate for this, she had studied law as an additional interest. She continued in research for a further 10 years in reproductive pharmacology. After retirement she donated her medals to the University, three to be awarded in medicine and histology, which have now lapsed, but the medals in computer science and music continue to be important rewards., (© The Author(s) 2014.)
- Published
- 2016
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28. The afterlife of Laurence Sterne (1713-1768): Body snatching, dissection and the role of Cambridge anatomist Charles Collignon.
- Author
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Dittmar JM and Mitchell PD
- Subjects
- Dissection history, England, Famous Persons, History, 18th Century, Humans, Literature, Modern history, Anatomists history, Exhumation history
- Abstract
This paper aims to highlight the practice of body snatching from graves in the 1700s for the purpose of providing corpses for anatomical dissection, and for stocking anatomy museums. To do this, we examine the exhumation and dissection of the famous eighteenth-century novelist Laurence Sterne and explore the involvement of Charles Collignon, Professor of Anatomy at the University of Cambridge. We also show that osteological and cut-mark analysis of a skull purported to be that of Sterne, currently housed in the Duckworth Collection at Cambridge, provides the key to solving the mystery surrounding why Sterne was resurrected., (© The Author(s) 2015.)
- Published
- 2016
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29. Sir William Turner (1832-1916) - Lancastrian, anatomist and champion of the Victorian era.
- Author
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Wessels Q, Correia JC, and Taylor AM
- Subjects
- History, 19th Century, History, 20th Century, South Africa, United Kingdom, Anatomists history
- Abstract
Sir William Turner, a Lancastrian, was renowned as a scientist, anatomist and a great reformer of medical education. His students became anatomists at various international institutions, which consequently shaped the future of anatomy as a subject matter both in the United Kingdom and in South Africa. Although Turner's accomplishments have been documented, little is known about the details that determined his career path and the individuals that shaped his future. Here the authors aim to highlight some aspects of Turner's academic achievements and his personal life as well as how he crossed paths with other great minds of the Victorian era including Richard Owen, Charles Darwin, James Paget and Joseph Lister., (© The Author(s) 2015.)
- Published
- 2016
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30. The platypus in Edinburgh: Robert Jameson, Robert Knox and the place of the Ornithorhynchus in nature, 1821-24.
- Author
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Jenkins B
- Subjects
- Animals, History, 19th Century, Museums history, Platypus classification, Scotland, Specimen Handling history, Anatomists history, Natural History history, Platypus anatomy & histology
- Abstract
The duck-billed platypus, or Ornithorhynchus, was the subject of an intense debate among natural historians in the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries. Its paradoxical mixture of mammalian, avian and reptilian characteristics made it something of a taxonomic conundrum. In the early 1820s Robert Jameson (1774-1854), the professor of natural history at the University of Edinburgh and the curator of the University's natural history museum, was able to acquire three valuable specimens of this species. He passed one of these on to the anatomist Robert Knox (1791-1862), who dissected the animal and presented his results in a series of papers to the Wernerian Natural History Society, which later published them in its Memoirs. This paper takes Jameson's platypus as a case study on how natural history specimens were used to create and contest knowledge of the natural world in the early nineteenth century, at a time when interpretations of the relationships between animal taxa were in a state of flux. It shows how Jameson used his possession of this interesting specimen to provide a valuable opportunity for his protégé Knox while also helping to consolidate his own position as a key figure in early nineteenth-century natural history.
- Published
- 2016
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31. Neuroimaging Five Hundred Years Later
- Author
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Rolma G
- Subjects
- Europe, History, 19th Century, History, 20th Century, Humans, United States, Anatomists history, Neuroimaging history, Radiologists history
- Abstract
The rapid technological progress of these last decades has brought refined instruments to neuroradiologists and consequently to anatomists, physiologists, neuroscientists. A short outline is given on recent advancements in the field. Looking at these wonderful images we must not forget the works of our predecessors, to whom we owe an inextinguishable gratitude.
- Published
- 2016
32. Visualizing Vesalius.
- Author
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Musajo-Somma A
- Subjects
- History, 16th Century, Italy, Anatomists history, Anatomy, Artistic history, Audiovisual Aids history, Medical Illustration history
- Abstract
The anatomist whose name became a trademark for all that is high standard in medicine was more engaging and nuanced than his portrait suggests. Padua was the epicenter of the Italian Renaissance in the XVI century, a place of unparalleled artistic and intellectual attainments where Vesalius started the revolutionary road towards the development of medical knowledge.
- Published
- 2016
33. Andreas Vesalius and his hoaxes, con variazioni.
- Author
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Dirix T
- Subjects
- Belgium, History, 16th Century, Anatomists history, Anatomy history, Deception
- Abstract
Andreas Vesalius’s popularity increases with every anniversary. The commemorations in 2014/2015, the quincentenary of his birth, were no exception and may mark the turning point in Vesalius research. Hoaxes surrounding the life and death of this famed anatomist, some of which have survived despite strong counter-evidence published some fifty, and even one hundred, years ago are finally dying out, while new myths are swiftly nipped in the bud thanks to today’s speed of publication and communication.
- Published
- 2016
34. [Anatomist, Anti-Abortionist, Anti-Darwinian. The three lives of Erich Blechschmidt (1904–1992)].
- Author
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Mildenberger FG
- Subjects
- Animals, Biological Evolution, Embryonic Development drug effects, Female, History, 20th Century, Humans, Male, National Socialism, Pregnancy, Teratogens, Thalidomide adverse effects, Abortion, Induced history, Anatomists history
- Abstract
The so called "Blechschmidt-Collection" in Goettingen is internationally presented as a masterpiece of German anatomical and embryological research after 1945. Compiled by anatomist Erich Blechschmidt (1904–1992), the collection's pieces are supposed to be ethically unobjectable. However, the embryos used for the collection have an obscure and dubious history. Blechschmidt is also well known for his infamous role in the Thalidomide/Contergan-trial, during which he claimed, Thalidomide would not have any negative effect on embryos. Later in his life, he became a vehement opponent of Evolution theory and disputed the right for abortion. His example may serve as one of many university professors in his generation who were appointed during the later years of the nazi regime, quickly regained their position after 1945 and continued their former research. Until now, this group did not receive appropriate scrutiny from critically minded historians.
- Published
- 2016
35. Fighting for Anatomy. Overview regarding two prestigious Romanian anatomists of the 20th century: Victor Papilian and Grigore T. Popa.
- Author
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Bârsu C
- Subjects
- History, 20th Century, Humans, Romania, Anatomists history
- Abstract
During many centuries, the progress of Anatomy was based on the perseverant and laborious activities done by anatomists. Their work can be considered as a fight for Anatomy. A particular problem arouse when this fight is excessively done and it limits the ability to correctly analyze the contribution made by other scientists in the same domain. This situation was identified at different personalities who lived in the same time and were involved in the same fundamental field of research. If, theoretically, the similarities between scientists should get them closer, in order to have a better communication, the antagonisms can lead them to rivalry. Our paper exemplifies a historical case in which the personages are Victor Papilian (1888-1956) and Grigore T. Popa (1892-1948). The resemblances between these two famous Romanian anatomists from the first half of the 20th century induced an evident scientific rivalry. Papilian and Popa brought a significant contribution in anatomy. Each of them was very much appreciated by his students. It is interesting that both of them had achievements in literature. We present the reasons of their disagreement and its consequences. Paradoxically, not the contrasts, but the resemblances between their strong characters produced a sort of animosity between them. This attitude diminished in time and their successors - Ioan Albu from the Cluj Faculty of Medicine and Ion Iancu from the Jassy Faculty of Medicine - had a long lasting and successful cooperation.
- Published
- 2016
36. Friedrich Berthold Reinke (1862-1919): brilliant yet troubled anatomist of the vocal fold.
- Author
-
Senior A
- Subjects
- Germany, History, 19th Century, History, 20th Century, Humans, Laryngeal Edema history, Leadership, Switzerland, Anatomists history, Anatomy history, Faculty, Medical history, Otolaryngology history, Vocal Cords pathology
- Abstract
Reinke's space is a critical laryngeal structure, and the eponym remains in current use in both clinical and research settings. However, little is known about the life of the German anatomist Friedrich Berthold Reinke. His name is missing from the otolaryngological histories, despite his work on the structure he described being responsible for a fundamental advance in our understanding of the larynx. Although brilliant, Reinke was described as impetuous and coarse by his colleagues, resulting in his academic career being cut short. Reinke's relative anonymity is thought to derive from the fact that he never defined himself as a laryngologist. Without question, Reinke's observations of the human vocal fold are substantive contributions, without which modern laryngology could not have evolved. This article aimed to summarise this brilliant yet troubled man's life and achievements, allowing appreciation for his singular genius and fundamental contribution to laryngology.
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. Lazare Rivière (1589-1655 AD), the Pioneer Pharmacologist, Anatomist, and Surgeon, Who Gave the First Modern Description of an Aortic Valve Failure.
- Author
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Sgantzos M, Tsoucalas G, Markatos K, Giatsiou S, and Androutsos G
- Subjects
- France, History, 16th Century, History, 17th Century, Humans, Male, Surgeons history, Anatomists history, Aortic Valve pathology, Aortic Valve physiopathology, Heart Valve Diseases history, Heart Valve Diseases pathology, Heart Valve Diseases physiopathology
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. William Cruikshank (1745-1800), anatomist and surgeon, and his illustrious patient, Samuel Johnson.
- Author
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McDonald SW
- Subjects
- England, History, 18th Century, History, 19th Century, Humans, Anatomists history, Anatomy history, Famous Persons, General Surgery history, Surgeons history
- Abstract
William Cumberland Cruikshank (1745-1800) was a Scot who from 1771 until his death taught anatomy at the famous school of anatomy in Great Windmill Street, London, founded by William Hunter (1718-1783). Arguably, his most famous patient was Samuel Johnson, the celebrated 18th Century man of letters and author of the first English dictionary. This article, largely drawn from Johnson's correspondence, documents the medical condition that caused Johnson to consult Cruikshank and some of the social links between Johnson, Hunter, and Cruikshank., (© 2015 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.)
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. Daniel Mollière (1848-1890): the French anatomist-surgeon who introduced Robin's pioneering osteoclast for the genu valgum observed in adolescents.
- Author
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Tsoucalas G, Karamanou M, Sgantzos M, and Androutsos G
- Subjects
- Genu Valgum surgery, History, 19th Century, Humans, Anatomists history, General Surgery history, Genu Valgum history, Orthopedics history, Osteoclasts
- Abstract
Inside the pages of the French medical treatises of the 19th century a forgotten osteoclast apparatus for the genu valgum observed in adolescents remained hidden waiting to be unearthed. It was Victor Robin's osteoclast, which has been used by the supreme French anatomist and surgeon Daniel Mollière. With the purpose to share a significant heritage on orthopaedics, a thorough research of the literature of the era was conducted. Our study resulted in the illumination of both Mollière's prolific figure and osteoclast's impact on orthopaedic surgery at that time. Having in mind Mollière's perseverance towards surgical apparatuses, his antiseptic measures inside his operating theatre, his published treatises, his surgical skills, we may effortlessly conclude that he stands among Lyon's best surgeons with an important contribution to orthopaedics.
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Sir Gordon Gordon-Taylor (1878-1960), Anatomist and Surgeon: Surgical Innovations in the "Laboratory of War," His 1948 Lecture in Athens.
- Author
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Tsoucalas G, Laios K, Giatsiou S, and Sgantzos M
- Subjects
- Blood Transfusion, Greece, History, 20th Century, Humans, London, World War II, Anatomists history, Military Medicine history, Surgeons history
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Daniel Mollière (1848-1890): major surgeon, anatomist, great teacher, and an innovative scientist of supreme operating action.
- Author
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Tsoucalas G, Karamanou M, Sgantzos MN, and Androutsos G
- Subjects
- Amputation, Surgical history, Anesthesia history, Antisepsis history, France, History, 19th Century, Humans, Male, Anatomists history, Surgeons history
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. Wandering anatomists and itinerant anthropologists: the antipodean sciences of race in Britain between the wars.
- Author
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Jones RL and Anderson W
- Subjects
- Australia, History, 20th Century, United Kingdom, Anatomists history, Anthropology, Cultural history, Anthropology, Physical history, Colonialism history, Racism history
- Abstract
While the British Empire conventionally is recognized as a source of research subjects and objects in anthropology, and a site where anthropological expertise might inform public administration, the settler-colonial affiliations and experiences of many leading physical anthropologists could also directly shape theories of human variation, both physical and cultural. Antipodean anthropologists like Grafton Elliot Smith were pre-adapted to diffusionist models that explained cultural achievement in terms of the migration, contact and mixing of peoples. Trained in comparative methods, these fractious cosmopolitans also favoured a dynamic human biology, often emphasizing the heterogeneity and environmental plasticity of body form and function, and viewing fixed, static racial typologies and hierarchies sceptically. By following leading representatives of empire anatomy and physical anthropology, such as Elliot Smith and Frederic Wood Jones, around the globe, it is possible to recover the colonial entanglements and biases of interwar British anthropology, moving beyond a simple inventory of imperial sources, and crediting human biology and social anthropology not just as colonial sciences but as the sciences of itinerant colonials.
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. More Vesalian Second Thoughts. The Annotations to the Institutiones anatomicae secundum Galeni sententiam, 1538.
- Author
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Nutton V
- Subjects
- History, 16th Century, Humans, Anatomists history, Manuscripts, Medical as Topic history
- Abstract
In 1538 Andreas Vesalius published his unauthorised revision of Guinther von Andernach's little anatomical textbook, the Institutiones anatomicae. Immediately on publication he set to work on a further revision, making around 250 changes. This paper presents these changes for the first time, discussing them in the context of Vesalius as a reviser of his own work and as anatomist moving away from reliance on Galen towards the independence of the 1543 Fabrica. As well as simple proof corrections, the notes show corrections to Vesalius' earlier anatomical observations as well as page references to passages in Galen discussed at greater length in the Fabrica.
- Published
- 2015
44. Granville Sharp Pattison (1791-1851): Scottish anatomist and surgeon with a propensity for conflict.
- Author
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D'Antoni AV, Loukas M, Black S, and Tubbs RS
- Subjects
- Anatomy, Europe, History, 19th Century, Anatomists history, Surgeons history
- Abstract
Granville Sharp Pattison was a Scottish anatomist and surgeon who also taught in the United States. This character from the history of anatomy lived a very colourful life. As many are unaware of Pattison, the present review of his life, contributions, and controversies seemed appropriate. Although Pattison was known to be a good anatomist, he will be remembered for his association with a propensity for conflict both in Europe and the United States.
- Published
- 2015
45. [Prof. Zdenko KriŽan (1915-2005) - physician, anatomist and teacher].
- Author
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Dudaric L and Bobinac D
- Subjects
- Anatomy, History, 20th Century, Anatomists history
- Abstract
Zdenko KriŽan (1915 - 2005), physician, anatomist and teacher, is an important academic figure of the 20th century, especially in the South Slavic area. He participated in the founding of three anatomical institutes and directed their work. During the years of his career he was teaching and he did scientific research. Prof. KriŽan is author of three compendia of anatomy for Medicine and Dentistry students. The results of his anatomical research, mainly in the area of the head skeleton and blood vessels, were published in national and international scientific journals. This article is a rewiew of prof. KriŽan's biography data.
- Published
- 2015
46. DEFINING A DISCOVERY: PRIORITY AND METHODOLOGICAL CONTROVERSY IN EARLY NINETEENTH-CENTURY ANATOMY.
- Author
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Berkowitz C
- Subjects
- History, 19th Century, Humans, Anatomists history, Motor Neurons cytology, Sensory Receptor Cells cytology
- Abstract
In the early nineteenth century, Charles Bell and François Magendie engaged in a decades-long priority dispute over the discovery of the roots of motor and sensory nerves. The constantly recalibrated arguments of its participants illuminate changes in the life sciences during that period. When Bell first wrote about the nerves in 1811, surgeon-anatomists ran small schools out of their homes, natural theology was in vogue, exchanges between British and French medical practitioners were limited by the Napoleonic Wars, and British practitioners typically rejected experimental physiology and vivisection. By the end of Magendie's career, medical science was produced in the laboratory, taught through artfully produced performances of the sort at which Magendie excelled, and disseminated through journals. It is not entirely clear which historical character, Bell or Magendie, 'won' the dispute, nor that they even had clear and consistent positions in it, but what is clear is that one style of science had won out over the other, and over the course of the dispute, pedagogy lost pride of place in medical science.
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. [Manuel Julián Grajales: propagator of smallpox vaccine in South America. Anatomist and surgeon].
- Author
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Laval E
- Subjects
- Chile, History, 19th Century, Spain, Anatomists history, Smallpox Vaccine history, Surgeons history
- Abstract
Grajales came to Chile in December 1807, noting that since 1805 smallpox vaccination had been introduced by Fray Pedro Manuel Chaparro, supported by the Councilor Nicholas Matorras. He founded the Vaccination Boards of Valparaiso and Santiago in 1808 and became professor of anatomy and surgery in 1819. In 1823 he received his authorization to practice medicine. He wanted to finish his medical studies at the University of San Marcos in Lima, but the war of Independence made this impossible. He returned to Spain in 1825. In 1848, he became Member of Honor of the Faculty of Medicine, Universidad de Chile.
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. Henri Rouvière (1876-1952) French anatomist.
- Author
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Romero-Reverón R
- Subjects
- History, 20th Century, Humans, Lymphatic System anatomy & histology, Paris, Anatomists history
- Abstract
Henri Rouvière (1876-1952): medical doctor and professor of human anatomy at Paris University and Honorary Member of the French Academy of Medicine. He wrote important essays on human anatomy and related topics, including a Compendium of Anatomy and Dissection (1911), A Treatise on Descriptive, Topographical and Functional Anatomy (1921), an anatomy of the human lymphatic system (1932), General Anatomy, Original Forms and Anatomical Structures (1939).
- Published
- 2014
49. The eminent anatomists who discovered the upper oesophageal sphincter.
- Author
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Marchese-Ragona R, Ottaviano G, Masiero S, Staffieri C, Martini A, Staffieri A, Mion M, Zaninotto G, and Restivo DA
- Subjects
- History of Medicine, History, 16th Century, History, 17th Century, History, 18th Century, History, Medieval, Humans, Pharyngeal Muscles anatomy & histology, Anatomists history, Anatomy history, Esophagogastric Junction anatomy & histology
- Abstract
Objective: To discover the anatomist who first identified the upper oesophageal sphincter., Method: The authors searched dozens of antique anatomy textbooks kept in the old section of the 'Vincenzo Pinali' Medical Library of Padua University, looking for descriptions of the upper oesophageal sphincter., Results: The oesophageal sphincter was drawn correctly only in 1601, by Julius Casserius, in the book De vocis auditusque organis historia anatomica… (which translates as 'An Anatomical History on the Organs of Voice and Hearing …'), and was properly described by Antonio Maria Valsalva in 1704 in the book De aure humana tractatus… ('Treatise on the Human Ear …')., Conclusion: Anatomists Casserius and Valsalva can be considered the discoverers of the 'oesophageal sphincter'.
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. In memoriam Pau Golanó (1965-2014)--anatomist, scientist, artist, teacher and friend.
- Author
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van Dijk CN, Calvo A, and Zaffagnini S
- Subjects
- Art history, History, 20th Century, History, 21st Century, Humans, Joints anatomy & histology, Orthopedics history, Spain, Anatomists history
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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