Amatus Lusitanus, a Portuguese Jew who gained notoriety as one of the most famous physician-scientists in XVI century Europe published collections of case histories—Centuriae—describing his most interesting patients. The Renaissance was a transitional period for medicine and the neurological sciences, which if still dominated by the humoral and ventricular-pneumatic doctrines, were taking the first steps away from them. We analysed the Centuriae for neurological and psychiatric cases in order to appreciate neurological practice in this period and selected one hundred which fit those diagnostic categories. The Centuriae contain cases of CNS infection and trauma, epilepsy, apoplexy and depressed states of consciousness (including coma, carus,...
This paper is principally addressed to hospital duty doctors and generalists: it is a practical revi...
The chapter provides an itinerary of knowledge on nervous system anatomy as one of the pillars of cl...
Abstract—Background: Silas Weir Mitchell (1829 to 1914), one of the most important neurologists in A...
In the1960s, twomajor works on coma by Fisher, Plum and Poser were published and ushered in the begi...
Before the end of the XIXth century neurosurgical operations were rarely performed in European unive...
The second half of the 19th century witnessed an increasing interest in neurology and psychiatry by ...
In 1593, the Magistrate of hospitals for the incurable in Genoa decided to allocate two beds for \u2...
Neurology as a separate branch of clinical medicine was not yet formed in Europe in the early 19th c...
In 1593 in Genoa, the Magistrate, of hospitals for the incurable, decided to allocate two beds for a...
Vilnius with its University (VU) at the first half of the 19th century was a progressive city, a pla...
Thomas Willis (1621-1675), author of the classical work Cerebri Anatome (1664), was arguably the fat...
Notes bibliogr. en fin de chapitres. Index.The brain in antiquity -- Changing concepts of brain func...
In 1664 Thomas Willis (1621–1675) published a text on the brain and nerves that was to be deeply inf...
Thomas Willis (1621-1675), author of the classical work Cerebri Anatome (1664), was arguably the fat...
Maurice Borges Vincent1, Marcos Martins da Silva1 The objective of this article is to highlight some...
This paper is principally addressed to hospital duty doctors and generalists: it is a practical revi...
The chapter provides an itinerary of knowledge on nervous system anatomy as one of the pillars of cl...
Abstract—Background: Silas Weir Mitchell (1829 to 1914), one of the most important neurologists in A...
In the1960s, twomajor works on coma by Fisher, Plum and Poser were published and ushered in the begi...
Before the end of the XIXth century neurosurgical operations were rarely performed in European unive...
The second half of the 19th century witnessed an increasing interest in neurology and psychiatry by ...
In 1593, the Magistrate of hospitals for the incurable in Genoa decided to allocate two beds for \u2...
Neurology as a separate branch of clinical medicine was not yet formed in Europe in the early 19th c...
In 1593 in Genoa, the Magistrate, of hospitals for the incurable, decided to allocate two beds for a...
Vilnius with its University (VU) at the first half of the 19th century was a progressive city, a pla...
Thomas Willis (1621-1675), author of the classical work Cerebri Anatome (1664), was arguably the fat...
Notes bibliogr. en fin de chapitres. Index.The brain in antiquity -- Changing concepts of brain func...
In 1664 Thomas Willis (1621–1675) published a text on the brain and nerves that was to be deeply inf...
Thomas Willis (1621-1675), author of the classical work Cerebri Anatome (1664), was arguably the fat...
Maurice Borges Vincent1, Marcos Martins da Silva1 The objective of this article is to highlight some...
This paper is principally addressed to hospital duty doctors and generalists: it is a practical revi...
The chapter provides an itinerary of knowledge on nervous system anatomy as one of the pillars of cl...
Abstract—Background: Silas Weir Mitchell (1829 to 1914), one of the most important neurologists in A...