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  • Boldrey, Barkley Edwin

    Data di pubblicazione: 1955

    Da: Antiq. F.-D. Söhn - Medicusbooks.Com, Marburg, Germania

    Membro dell'associazione: ILAB VDA

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    EUR 33,00

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    Spedito da Germania a U.S.A.

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    GP, 11/06. - American Academy of General Practice, June 1955, Gr.4°, pp108-119, 5 col. Figs., orig. wrappers. Rare Offprint! Epartment of Neurological Surgery, University of California School of Medicine, San Francisco. Edwin B. Boldrey was a professor of neurosurgery at the University of California-San Francisco and a 1932 graduate from Indiana University School of Medicine. After obtaining his M.D., he began his postgraduate training at the Montreal General Hospital, and later went to the Montreal Neurological Institute at McGill University. At the institute, Boldery worked with Dr. Wilder Penfield on cortical localization. With Penfield, he studied and published original contributions that provided the fundamental anatomical correlates of much of the clinical physiology of motor and sensory cortical mechanisms in humans. He completed his residency in 1939. Boldery also received an M.Sc. degree in neurology and neurosurgery in 1936. In 1940, Dr. Boldery joined the Department of Neurological Surgery at University of California - San Francisco, where he served on the faculty for 48 years and as Chairman from 1951 to 1956. Dr. Boldrey has made many important contributions to his specialty, including the development of new concepts of cortical physiology.

  • Boldrey, Barkley Edwin & Elvidge, Arthur R.

    Data di pubblicazione: 1939

    Da: Antiq. F.-D. Söhn - Medicusbooks.Com, Marburg, Germania

    Membro dell'associazione: ILAB VDA

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    EUR 55,00

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    Spedito da Germania a U.S.A.

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    Ann. Surg., 110/2. - Philadelphia, J.B. Lippincott Compoany, Publishers, 1939, 8°, pp.273-284, 5 Figs., orig. wrappers. Rare Offprint! From the Montreal Neurological Institute, and the Department of Neurology and Neurosurgery, McGill University, and the Montreal General Hospital. Reprint No. 120. "Since Cruveilhier's description of an intracranial "tumeur d'apparence perlée" (1829), dermoid cysts have been encountered frequently in the brain. A spinal dermoid, however, is still a rare operative or autopsy finding. Since 1875, the presence of dermoid or epidermoid cysts in the vertebral canal has been reported in 40 instances, the present contribution of three such cases being included. This paper presents a summary of the records and a brief consideration of the anatomical and clinical aspects of these tumors. Bostroem's term "dermoid" and "epidermoid" (1897), currently more acceptable than Müller's "cholesteatome" (1838), denotes a group of congenital growths which "commonly originate by the inclusion of a portion of ectoderm during closure of embryonal fissures, or at the point of union of ectoderm with other structures along the course of ectodermic invagination or from persistent embryonal ectodermal structures" or from trauma or teratomatous remnants (Ewing, 1931). The type and location of the cyst appear related to the age of the fetus at the time of the inclusion error. They may be single or multiple ; they may contain any or all of the products of the skin and its glands, though epidermoids do not as a rule contain hair. In this presentation we have not differentiated between dermoid and epidermoid. We have assumed the accuracy of the pathological diagnosis in all instances. The following cases have been previously reported." Boldrey & Elvidge Edwin B. Boldrey was a professor of neurosurgery at the University of California-San Francisco and a 1932 graduate from Indiana University School of Medicine. After obtaining his M.D., he began his postgraduate training at the Montreal General Hospital, and later went to the Montreal Neurological Institute at McGill University. At the institute, Boldery worked with Dr. Wilder Penfield on cortical localization. With Penfield, he studied and published original contributions that provided the fundamental anatomical correlates of much of the clinical physiology of motor and sensory cortical mechanisms in humans. He completed his residency in 1939. Boldery also received an M.Sc. degree in neurology and neurosurgery in 1936. In 1940, Dr. Boldery joined the Department of Neurological Surgery at University of California - San Francisco, where he served on the faculty for 48 years and as Chairman from 1951 to 1956. Dr. Boldrey has made many important contributions to his specialty, including the development of new concepts of cortical physiology.

  • Boldrey, Barkley Edwin

    Data di pubblicazione: 1943

    Da: Antiq. F.-D. Söhn - Medicusbooks.Com, Marburg, Germania

    Membro dell'associazione: ILAB VDA

    Valutazione del venditore 5 su 5 stelle 5 stelle, Maggiori informazioni sulle valutazioni dei venditori

    Contatta il venditore

    EUR 44,00

    Spedizione EUR 36,45
    Spedito da Germania a U.S.A.

    Quantità: 1 disponibili

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    Radiology, 41/2. - Radiological Society of North America, August, 1943, Gr.4°, pp.107-116, 10 Figs., orig. self wrapper. Rare Offprint! From the Montreal Neurological Service of Howard C. Naffziger, M.D., University of California Hospital. Presented , as a part of a Symposium on Brain Tumors, before the Radiological Society of North Amerika, at the twenty-seventh Annual Meeting, San Francisco, Calif., Dec. 1-5, 1941. "The title of this part of the symposium on brain tumors does not question the existence of a relationship between pathology and roentgenologic diagnosis; it is rather a statement of fact. This is stimulating to the imagination, yet is full of danger for any who might incline toward over-enthusiasm. The relative situations to be discussed are the possibilities, perhaps occasionally probabilities, of pathologic diagnosis when the radiologist possesses certain clinical and roentgenographic information. An attempt will be made to point out the possible pathological reasons for some of the shadows recorded on the x-ray film. In 1879 Macewen (4) successfully removed a brain tumor from the frontal lobe, the first operation of this kind on record. The next eighteen years of neuro-anatomical and neurophysiological endeavor culminated in an event in Italy which, though unheralded at the time, was comparable in its implications to the original surgical attack on this disease. In 1897, just two years after Roentgen discovered the x-ray, Obici and Bollici (5) first recorded the radiographic demonstration of an intracranial tumor (Fig. 1). In the four and one-half decades which have followed, the labor of anatomists, physiologists, pathologists, clinicians, surgeons, and radiologists has brought us to a level where we can attempt a correlation between two highly specialized scientific fields." Boldrey Edwin B. Boldrey was a professor of neurosurgery at the University of California-San Francisco and a 1932 graduate from Indiana University School of Medicine. After obtaining his M.D., he began his postgraduate training at the Montreal General Hospital, and later went to the Montreal Neurological Institute at McGill University. At the institute, Boldery worked with Dr. Wilder Penfield on cortical localization. With Penfield, he studied and published original contributions that provided the fundamental anatomical correlates of much of the clinical physiology of motor and sensory cortical mechanisms in humans. He completed his residency in 1939. Boldery also received an M.Sc. degree in neurology and neurosurgery in 1936. In 1940, Dr. Boldery joined the Department of Neurological Surgery at University of California - San Francisco, where he served on the faculty for 48 years and as Chairman from 1951 to 1956. Dr. Boldrey has made many important contributions to his specialty, including the development of new concepts of cortical physiology.