Herophilus of Chalcedon (ca. 330-250 BC) was considered as one of the most important figures of anatomy during the antiquity. Apart from his other works in anatomy very important are also his observations in ocular anatomy. He discovered first the optic nerve and described four tunics in the eye
The first detailed study of the pulse (sphygmology) is associated in antiquity with Herophilus (the ...
Although ancient Greek physicians studied a great number of ocular diseases in their medical texts s...
Classical and Hellenistic Greece were known to be a hub of scientific research. However, the potenti...
A REVIEW OF the history of ancient medicine reveals that most of the knowledge is concentrated in th...
Interest in diseases of the eyes (probably rampant in antiquity) is evident in early medical writing...
Herophilus of Chalcedon (c.330-250 BC) is famous as one of the leading figures in the development of...
Abstract The authors outline the historical development of anatomical and physiological acquisiti...
Herophilus of Chalcedon recognised the human brain as an organ of the nervous system that he disting...
In medieval Arabic medicine Ophthalmology had a central role. Ocular anatomy was described in many o...
The ancient Greek’s understanding of medicine including anatomy was quite rudimentary to begin with....
OBJECTIVE: In the historic description of Herodotus on the battle of Thermopylae at 480 BC two forme...
Knowledge of human anatomy was acquired through dissections of the human body that may have begun as...
In a period of Ptolemaic Alexandria that has been referred to by modern scholars as a frontier envi...
This overview of the development of the nervous system in antiquity, shows that whereas neuroanatomy...
Christopher T Leffler,1 Stephen G Schwartz,2 Tamer M Hadi,3 Ali Salman,1 Vivek Vasuki1 1Department ...
The first detailed study of the pulse (sphygmology) is associated in antiquity with Herophilus (the ...
Although ancient Greek physicians studied a great number of ocular diseases in their medical texts s...
Classical and Hellenistic Greece were known to be a hub of scientific research. However, the potenti...
A REVIEW OF the history of ancient medicine reveals that most of the knowledge is concentrated in th...
Interest in diseases of the eyes (probably rampant in antiquity) is evident in early medical writing...
Herophilus of Chalcedon (c.330-250 BC) is famous as one of the leading figures in the development of...
Abstract The authors outline the historical development of anatomical and physiological acquisiti...
Herophilus of Chalcedon recognised the human brain as an organ of the nervous system that he disting...
In medieval Arabic medicine Ophthalmology had a central role. Ocular anatomy was described in many o...
The ancient Greek’s understanding of medicine including anatomy was quite rudimentary to begin with....
OBJECTIVE: In the historic description of Herodotus on the battle of Thermopylae at 480 BC two forme...
Knowledge of human anatomy was acquired through dissections of the human body that may have begun as...
In a period of Ptolemaic Alexandria that has been referred to by modern scholars as a frontier envi...
This overview of the development of the nervous system in antiquity, shows that whereas neuroanatomy...
Christopher T Leffler,1 Stephen G Schwartz,2 Tamer M Hadi,3 Ali Salman,1 Vivek Vasuki1 1Department ...
The first detailed study of the pulse (sphygmology) is associated in antiquity with Herophilus (the ...
Although ancient Greek physicians studied a great number of ocular diseases in their medical texts s...
Classical and Hellenistic Greece were known to be a hub of scientific research. However, the potenti...