Ambroise Paré II: Paré’s contributions to amputation and ligature
نویسندگان
چکیده
منابع مشابه
Ambroise Paré (1510-1590).
study medicine in 1536 and supported himself by lecturing on mathematics, geography and astronomy. In Paris, his teachers included Sylvius and Andermach, who hailed him with Andrea Vesalius as his most able assistant in dissections There he stepped over the line that Christian doctrine had drown between acceptable areas of astrology, and forbidden zone of judicial astrology (left for God-essent...
متن کاملAmbroise Paré (1510-1590): surgeon and obstetrician of the Renaissance.
Ambroise Pare's life spanned most of the sixteenth century. He was born in a village near Laval in Maine, to a chest maker. After an apprenticeship to a barber-surgeon in Angers from the age of 15, he spent four years (1532-36) as surgical dresser at the Hotel Dieu in Paris. Sylvius was one of his teachers. He qualified as a master barber-surgeon in 1541 and was admitted to the Royal College of...
متن کاملAmbroise Paré (1510 to 1590): a surgeon centuries ahead of his time.
In their extensive writings, Hippocrates and Celsus counseled physicians to be knowledgeable in both the medical and surgical management of patient recovery. However, their words fell by the wayside because cutting of the body was forbidden by the Roman Catholic Church. Furthermore, the contemporaneous Arabic medical teachings emphasized tradition and authority over observation and personal exp...
متن کامل"Labor improbus omnia vincit"; Ambroise Paré and sixteenth century child care.
Ambroise Paré (1510-1590) is regarded as one of the greatest surgeons who ever lived. In the sixteenth century, through his example and his writings, Paré did more than anybody else to raise the previously poor reputation of surgery "to one of dignity and esteem." He significantly influenced the surgical management of wounds, especially those produced by gunshot. However, he wrote widely on oth...
متن کاملAmbroise Paré and the Birth of the Gentle Art of Surgery
During the 1537 siege of Turin, a young French barber-surgeon abandoned the conventional wisdom about the treatment of bullet wounds, giving rise to a revolution in surgical techniques and pedagogy. Ambroise Paré was not a physician — it was not until more recent centuries that it became usual for a surgeon to be a holder of a MD degree — but his dedication to empirical observation and reasonin...
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ژورنال
عنوان ژورنال: International Orthopaedics
سال: 2013
ISSN: 0341-2695,1432-5195
DOI: 10.1007/s00264-013-1857-x