958 resultados para Cambridge (Mass.)--History--17th century--Sources


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The four-link chain of the motor unit represents the contemporary end-point of some two millennia of evolving knowledge in neuroscience. The paradigm shift in neuromuscular epistemology occurred in the mid-17th century. In 1666, the newly graduated Dutch doctor, Jan Swammerdam (1637-1680) published his former investigations of dissected nerve-muscle preparations. These experiments comprised the quantum leap from observation and speculation, to that of experimentation in the field of neuroanatomy and neurophysiology. In what he termed 'A Curious Experiment' he also described the phenomenon of intrinsic muscle excitability - I cannot observe that the muscle in the living animal ever absolutely ceases from all motion. Eighty years later (1752), von Haller demonstrated experimentally that irritability (contractility) was an intrinsic property of all muscular tissue; and distinguished between the sensibility of nerve impulses and the irritability of muscular contraction. This experimental progression from Swammerdam to von Haller culminated in 1850, when Claude Bernard's studies in experimental pharmacology confirmed that muscle was a functional unit, independent of any electrical innervation via its supplying nerve. This account comprises an audit of Swammerdam's work in the perspective of neuromuscular knowledge. (C) 2002 Elsevier Science B.V. All rights reserved.

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This account is drawn from a manuscript in Madrid National Library and till recently unpublished. It is an autobiographical account of a diamond trader who lived in Goa in the 17th century and travelled to various regions of India and elsewhere in Asia in search of diamonds. Jacques de Couttre, a flemish merchant, was a victim of the Goa Inquisition, but his diamonds won him freedom!

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RESUMO: A presente abordagem procura estabelecer uma relação entre a Medicina e a Azulejaria. Um conjunto de composições produzidas entre o século XVII e a década de 90 do século XX, localizado na área de Lisboa e seus arredores, organiza-se em torno de oito vectores que ilustram a presença de alusões à Medicina na Azulejaria da referida área. São estes, aspectos relacionados com a higiene, marcos da história da assistência, ciclos temáticos relacionados com os quatro elementos primordiais e com os cinco sentidos, representações ligadas à ideia de morte, episódios bíblicos, referências hagiográficas e elementos ligados à acção médica, como objectos, patologias, instituições ou acontecimentos, associados à Medicina, que atestam esta relação entre Arte e Ciência, de forma geral, e entre a Azulejaria e a Medicina, de forma particular. À análise destes vectores, antecede uma resenha histórica relativa à ligação entre Arte e Ciência e um apontamento histórico acerca da história da Azulejaria. Pretende-se demonstrar esta conexão interdisciplinar e reforçar a importância da vertente humanista da Medicina, na sua história, na sua aprendizagem e na sua prática.-------------------------------------ABSTRACT: The present approach aims at establishing a relation between Medicine and Tile Art. A group of compositions produced between the 17th century and the 1990s, located in the Lisbon area and its surroundings, is organized around eight vectors that illustrate the presence of allusions to Medicine in the Tile Art in the mentioned areas. These are related with hygiene aspects, landmarks in the history of assistance, thematic cycles related with the four main elements and with the five senses, representations connected to the idea of death, biblical episodes, hagiographic references and elements connected to the medical intervention, such as objects, pathologies, institutions or events related to Medicine that testify this relation between Art and Science in a broad context, and between Tile Art and Medicine in a strict sense. Prior to the analysis of these vectors there is a historic contextualization concerning the relationship between Art and Science and a historical note about the history of Tile Art. The aim is to demonstrate the interdisciplinary relation and reinforce the importance of the humanistic side of Medicine, in its history, its learning and its practice.------------------------------------RÉSUMÉ: Cet étude vise établir une relation entre la Médecine et l’Art de l’ « Azulejaria ». Un ensemble de compositions produites entre le XVII ème siècle et le dernier quart du XX ème siècle, dans la région de Lisbonne, s’organise autour de huit axes qui illustrent des références à la médecine. Nous avons récupéré des motifs allusifs à l’hygiène, à l’histoire de l’assistance, aux cycles thématiques des quatre éléments primordiaux et des cinq sens, à la mort, aux épisodes bibliques ou hagiographiques mais aussi aux motifs qui reproduisent des objets, des pathologies, des institutions ou des évènements médicaux. Tous ces exemples mettent à jour la relation entre l’Art et la Science, en général, et entre l’ « Azulejaria» et la Médecine, en particulier. Avant d’analyser ces huit axes, nous établirons un parcours historique pour expliquer la relation entre Art et Science, ainsi qu’une brève histoire de l’ «azulejaria». Nous prétendons démontrer cette relation interdisciplinaire et renforcer l’importance de la vertu humaniste des Sciences Médicales dans son histoire, son apprentissage et sa pratique.

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Dissertação de mestrado em História

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Obese persons (those with a body mass index [BMI] ≥30 kg/m2) tend to underestimate their weight, leading to an underestimation of their true (measured) BMI and obesity prevalence.1,2 In contrast, underweight people (BMI <18.5 kg/m2) tend to report themselves heavier, resulting in a higher BMI compared with measured BMI and an underestimation of underweight prevalence.

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Summary Points Brucellosis remains the commonest anthropozoonosis worldwide, and its treatment remains complex, requiring protracted administration of more than one antibiotic. In November 2006, a consensus meeting aimed at reaching a common specialist statement on the treatment of brucellosis was held in Ioannina, Greece under the auspices of the International Society of Chemotherapy and the Institute of Continuing Medical Education of Ioannina. The author panel suggests that the optimal treatment of uncomplicated brucellosis should be based on a six-week regimen of doxycycline combined either with streptomycin for 2–3 weeks, or rifampicin for six weeks. Gentamicin may be considered an acceptable alternative to streptomycin, while all other regimens/combinations should be considered second-line. The development of a common global therapeutic language for human brucellosis, and future, properly conducted clinical trials would definitely solve controversies regarding the disease.

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During the past 20 years, BOLD fMRI has developed towards a central and fundamental tool in neuroscience. It has been shown that the BOLD response provides an indicator of neuronal activity in the brain. Consequently, for an accurate interpretation of findings in BOLD MRI experiments and to draw meaningful conclusions about the temporal evolution of neural events, a deep understanding of the nature of the BOLD contrast has become of essential importance. Since the dynamics of the major direct determinants of the BOLD signal (CBF, CBV and CMRO(2)) range between seconds and minutes, long duration stimulation was an early key strategy needed to study and understand the BOLD characteristics. This paper summarizes and discusses the thoughts and rationales of the long duration stimulation studies.

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OBJECTIVES: Jean Cruveilhier has always been described as a pioneer in pathological anatomy. Almost nothing has been reported concerning his exceptional methodology allying pre-mortem clinical description and syndromic classification of neurological and neurosurgical diseases, and post-mortem meticulous dissections. Cruveilhier's methodology announced the birth of the anatomoclinical method built up by Jean-Martin Charcot and the neurological French school during the 19th century. The aim of our work is to extract the quintessence of Cruveilhier's contributions to skull base pathology through his cogent clinical descriptions coupled with exceptional lithographs of anterior skull base, suprasellar and cerebello-pontine angle tumors. METHODS: We reviewed the masterwork of Jean Cruveilhier on pathological anatomy and we selected the chapters dedicated to central nervous system pathologies, mainly skull base diseases. A systematic review was performed on Pubmed/Medline and Google Scholar using the keywords "Jean Cruveilhier", "Skull base pathology", "Anatomoclinical method". RESULTS: Among his descriptions, Cruveilhier dedicated large chapters to neurosurgical diseases including brain tumors, cerebrovascular pathologies, malformations of the central nervous system, hydrocephalus, brain infections and spinal cord compressions. CONCLUSION: This work emphasizes on the role of Jean Cruveilhier in the birth of the anatomoclinical method particularly in neuroscience during a 19th century rich of epistemological evolutions toward an evidence-based medicine, through the prism of Cruveilhier's contribution to skull base pathology.