A Short History of MedicineRonald Press Company, 1955 - 258 sider |
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Side 75
... important as centers of learning in general and of medical learning in particular . The importance of this monastic medicine should not be overestimated . The writings of the monks were primarily of a philological character . There were ...
... important as centers of learning in general and of medical learning in particular . The importance of this monastic medicine should not be overestimated . The writings of the monks were primarily of a philological character . There were ...
Side 168
... important contributions to medical science now entered the field with important bac- teriological discoveries : Japan through the work of Kitasato and Shiga , and the United States through the work of Welch , Flexner , and Theobald ...
... important contributions to medical science now entered the field with important bac- teriological discoveries : Japan through the work of Kitasato and Shiga , and the United States through the work of Welch , Flexner , and Theobald ...
Side 169
... important work on antitoxins and immunity . The fact that pathogenic micro - organisms produced an increase of antibodies in the blood was used for diagnostic purposes on a large scale in Widal's agglutination test for typhoid fever in ...
... important work on antitoxins and immunity . The fact that pathogenic micro - organisms produced an increase of antibodies in the blood was used for diagnostic purposes on a large scale in Widal's agglutination test for typhoid fever in ...
Indhold
PALEOPATHOLOGY AND PALEOMEDICINE | 3 |
3 | 18 |
ANCIENT INDIA AND CHINA | 34 |
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anatomist ancient anesthesia animal approach Arab Asclepiades Asclepius asepsis bacteria bacteriology basic became blood body bones Broussais cause century B.C. Chapter Chinese cian civilization clinical medicine clinical observation clinicians contributions developed diagnosis diphtheria discovery doctor drugs early Ebers Papyrus Edwin Smith Papyrus Egyptian eighteenth century epidemic Erasistratus experiments fact famous fever field French function Galen German Greek medicine Hindu Hippocrates Hippocratic history of medicine hospital humoral hygiene important infection influence invention London magic malaria medi medical history medical profession medieval medieval medicine ment mental disease methods Middle Ages modern nature nineteenth century operation organs outstanding Paracelsus Paris Pasteur pathology patient period philosophy physi physician physiology Pinel practice primarily primitive medicine progress pupil role scientific smallpox social specialties spite supernatural supernaturalistic surgeons surgery surgical syphilis techniques theory therapeutic tion Trans treatise treatment tuberculosis typhoid typhoid fever typhus Vesalius Vienna Virchow William wounds