Sir John Russell Reynolds was an eminent and highly influential physician in the Victorian era who held the Presidencies of the Royal College of Physicians of London, and of the British Medical Association. He was the protegee of the great experimental physiologist, Marshall Hall, who discovered the reflex arc, and succeeded to Hall's clinical practice in London. Reynolds' thought and clinical activities linked the emerging British neurology of the first half of the 19th century with its blossoming, particularly in London, from 1860 onwards. In his writings Reynolds was the first English author to apply the approach to classification of neurological disorders that is still often used, though now in modified form. He was also the first to en...
The recent Congress of the Italian Society of Neuroscience in Verona attracted several hundred parti...
Thomas Willis (1621-1675), author of the classical work Cerebri Anatome (1664), was arguably the fat...
In several issues of the London Medical Gazette during June-July of 1837 there was an interchange of...
James Ross (1837-1892) was an Aberdeen medical graduate who, after 13 years in rural general practic...
Charles Bland Radcliffe (1822–1889) was one of the physicians who made major contributions to the li...
William Aldren Turner (1864-1945), in his day Physician to the National Hospital, Queen Square, and ...
If John Martyn Harlow is known at all in the neurosciences, it is because he was the physician who a...
By the beginning of the XIXth Century the old belief that epilepsy was due to demonic possession or ...
Alexander Robertson (1834–1908) was a Glasgow physician whose professional career was involved mainl...
Neurasthenia was used by nineteenth-century American doctors to explain a wide variety of symptoms n...
Item does not contain fulltextIn the history of Dutch neurology Muskens has a place in his own right...
Howard Florey is best known as the scientist who developed penicillin and ushered in the modern anti...
A century since his passing, the legacy of the great Victorian clinical neurologist, Sir William Ric...
Thomas Willis (1621-1675), author of the classical work Cerebri Anatome (1664), was arguably the fat...
"Comprises a series of essays extracted from the 'System of medicine', edited by J. Russell Reynolds...
The recent Congress of the Italian Society of Neuroscience in Verona attracted several hundred parti...
Thomas Willis (1621-1675), author of the classical work Cerebri Anatome (1664), was arguably the fat...
In several issues of the London Medical Gazette during June-July of 1837 there was an interchange of...
James Ross (1837-1892) was an Aberdeen medical graduate who, after 13 years in rural general practic...
Charles Bland Radcliffe (1822–1889) was one of the physicians who made major contributions to the li...
William Aldren Turner (1864-1945), in his day Physician to the National Hospital, Queen Square, and ...
If John Martyn Harlow is known at all in the neurosciences, it is because he was the physician who a...
By the beginning of the XIXth Century the old belief that epilepsy was due to demonic possession or ...
Alexander Robertson (1834–1908) was a Glasgow physician whose professional career was involved mainl...
Neurasthenia was used by nineteenth-century American doctors to explain a wide variety of symptoms n...
Item does not contain fulltextIn the history of Dutch neurology Muskens has a place in his own right...
Howard Florey is best known as the scientist who developed penicillin and ushered in the modern anti...
A century since his passing, the legacy of the great Victorian clinical neurologist, Sir William Ric...
Thomas Willis (1621-1675), author of the classical work Cerebri Anatome (1664), was arguably the fat...
"Comprises a series of essays extracted from the 'System of medicine', edited by J. Russell Reynolds...
The recent Congress of the Italian Society of Neuroscience in Verona attracted several hundred parti...
Thomas Willis (1621-1675), author of the classical work Cerebri Anatome (1664), was arguably the fat...
In several issues of the London Medical Gazette during June-July of 1837 there was an interchange of...