نتایج جستجو برای: Haly Abbas

تعداد نتایج: 1751  

Journal: :Acta medico-historica adriatica : AMHA 2015
Arman Zargaran Alireza Mehdizadeh Hassan Yarmohammadi Hossein Kiani Abdolali Mohagheghzadehl

During the final hours of pregnancy, uterine contractions cause the foetus to move through the birth canal and leave the mother's body. Haly Abbas (died 982-994 CE), is believed to be the first writer to explain the role of these contractions. However, this concept had in fact been described in the text titled Bab-e-Borzouyeh, written four centuries earlier by the physician Borzouyeh (Perzoes i...

Journal: :JAMA: The Journal of the American Medical Association 1913

Journal: :research on history of medicine 0
golnoush sadat mahmoudi nezhad student research committee, shiraz university of medical sciences, shiraz, iran behnam dalfardi student research committee, shiraz university of medical sciences, shiraz, iran alireza mehdizadeh research office for the history of persian medicine, shiraz university of medical sciences, shiraz, iran sara khademolhosseini

abū l-ḥasan alī ibn al-‘abbās al-majūsī ahvazi (? 930-994 ad), best known as haly abbas in the west, was a 10th century persian physician whose lifetime coincided with the flourishing of medical science in the near east, the islamic medicine golden age, an era extending from the 9th to the 12th centuries ad. haly abbas, in his extant book kāmil al-sinā‘ah al-tibbīyah (the perfect book of the ar...

Journal: :Journal of B.U.ON. : official journal of the Balkan Union of Oncology 2016
Konstantinos Laios Marianna Karamanou Achilleas Chatziioannou Thomas Nikolopoulos Marilita M Moschos George Androutsos

In the ophthalmological treatises of the medieval Arabo-Islamic physicians such as al-Mawsili (9th-10th century), al-Kahhal (ca. 940-1010), Haly Abbas (10th century) and al Sadili (14th century) we may find references about ocular cancer, focusing on eyelid tumors and cancerous ulcers of the cornea. These references are similar to the analogous ones of ancient Greek physicians as these are pres...

2014
Mojtaba HEYDARI Behnam DALFARDI Samad E. J. GOLZARI Seyed Hamdollah MOSAVAT

1. Research Center for Traditional Medicine and History of Medicine, Shiraz University of Medical Sciences, Shiraz, Iran 2. Essence of Parsiyan Wisdom Institute, Traditional Medicine and Medicinal Plant Incubator, Shiraz University of Medical Sciences, Shiraz, Iran 3. Student Research Committee, Shiraz University of Medical Sciences, Shiraz, Iran 4. Research Office for the History of Persian Me...

Journal: :research on history of medicine 0
pooneh sarveravan ehya amalsaleh

ali-ibn-e-abbas-al-majusi, well known as haly abbas in the west, a physician, surgeon and psychologist of buyid dynasty era, lived in the 10th century (a.d). he, along with tabari, razi, avicienna, and jorjani, established the foundation of islamic medicine. he authored “kamilu sina’at” or “al-kitab al-maliki” (the royal book), a book on medicine which was used in european universities until th...

Azizi, Mohammad Hossein,

The" Golden Age of the Persian Medicine" is between the 9th and 14th centuries. One of the most prominent Iranian medical scholars in this era is Ali ibn Al-Abbas Al-Majusi who is known as Ahwazi( or in Latin as Haly Abbas). He was born in Ahwaz about 932.His chief medical work was Al-kitab Al-Maliki means the Royal Book. It was regarded as a reliable scientific source for many centuries.

Journal: :Acta medico-historica adriatica : AMHA 2015
Mojtaba Heydari Mesbah Shams Mohammad Hashem Hashempur Behnam Dalfardi Afshin Borhani-Haghighi

Neuropathic pain is supposed to be a post-renaissance described medical entity. Although it is often believed that John Fothergill (1712-1780) provided the first description of this condition in 1773, a review of the medieval Persian medical writings will show the fact that neuropathic pain was a medieval-originated concept. "Auojae Asab" [Nerve-originated Pain[ was used as a medical term in me...

Journal: :Archives of Iranian medicine 2008
Mohammad-Hossein Azizi Touraj Nayernouri Farzaneh Azizi

The present article describes briefly the development of the theories regarding the circulation of blood in humans, from the time of Galen (second century C.E.) to the work of William Harvey (17th century C.E.).We shall summarize the views of Galen together with those of two prominent Iranian physicians of the Middle Ages (Razi and Ahwazi known in the West as Rhazes and Haly Abbas respectively)...

Journal: :Archives of Iranian medicine 2015
Houchang D Modanlou

During the Sassanid Empire in Persia (226-652 AD), there was a renaissance of humanistic sciences, including medicine, in the city of Gondi-Shapur. When the Islamic center of power moved to Baghdad in about 750 AD, physicians of Gondi-Shapur, including the dean of the medical school (a Nestorian Christian), gradually moved to Baghdad constructing hospitals and medical schools. Aided by the Pers...

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