Data di pubblicazione: 1963
Da: Antiq. F.-D. Söhn - Medicusbooks.Com, Marburg, Germania
EUR 44,00
Quantità: 1 disponibili
Aggiungi al carrelloReview of Surgery, 20/3. - J.B. Lippincott Company, 1963, 8°, pp.153-174, 14 Figs., orig. self wrappers. Offprint! *) "In July, 1962, the Editors of Review of Surgery requested the author to write "The Story of Arteriovenous Fistula.". The author demurred, reluctant to reopen old controversies and appalled at the thought of recalling the misconceptions, misrepresentations and conflicting ideas associated with this lesion in the past 40 years. His objections wee overruled and, for better or worse, here it is." "Holman was the first to bring the Halstedian tradition to the West Coast. He established not only a surgical residency program but also the Halsted Laboratory of Surgical Research, in which he and a number of his faculty carried out important experiments. Holman is best known for his work on arteriovenous fistulas. His initial publication on this subject was in 1923, and his final one was in 1971. In between, he wrote more than 40 papers reflecting both laboratory and clinical observations and experimentation in this field. His original monograph, entitled "Arteriovenous Aneurysms: Abnormal Communications Between the Arterial and Venous," published in Circulation in 1937, had been awarded the coveted Samuel Gross prize of the Philadelphia Academy of Surgery in 1930. " James B. D. Mark: Historical Perspectives of The American Association for Thoracic Surgery: Emile Frederic Holman, MD (1890-1977). JTCVS, 130/1 (2005): pp.206-207.
Editore: Macmillan, 1937., New York:, 1937
Da: Jeff Weber Rare Books, Neuchatel, NEUCH, Svizzera
EUR 243,03
Quantità: 1 disponibili
Aggiungi al carrello8vo. xvi, 244 pp. 79 figures (incl. frontispiece portrait), index. Original navy-blue blind- and gilt-stamped cloth. INSCRIBED BY THE AUTHOR to Dr. James Dillon, Jr., Xmas 1941. Very good. RARE. First book issue. "This monograph has been awarded the 1930 quinquennial Samuel D. Gross prize by the Philadelphia academy of surgery." - page [vii]. "His original monograph, entitled "Arteriovenous Aneurysms: Abnormal Communications Between the Arterial and Venous," published in Circulation in 1937, had been awarded the coveted Samuel Gross prize of the Philadelphia Academy of Surgery in 1930. He carried out meticulous investigations of the phenomenon of poststenotic dilatation and wrote on such varied topics as congenital and acquired heart disease, pericarditis and lung abscess, portal hypertension, lung cancer, head injuries, appendicitis, and war wounds." - James B.D. Mark, MD. / Holman was professor of surgery at Stanford University. "Emile Frederic Holman, the 33rd president of The American Association for Thoracic Surgery, was born in Moberly, Missouri, on August 12, [1890], the son of a Methodist Minister. The family moved to Southern California in 1902, where young Holman had his secondary school education. He entered Stanford University in 1907, initially majoring in mathematics, but he soon changed to the Department of Education. To support himself in college, Holman dropped out for a semester in his sophomore year to learn shorthand and typing. On returning to Stanford, he applied at the President's office for stenographic work, and Dr David Starr Jordan promptly supplied him with manuscripts to copy. This led to his becoming secretary to President Jordan on graduating Phi Beta Kappa in 1911, a position he held until 1914, when he went to Oxford as Stanford's second Rhodes Scholar. Jordan was a constant inspiration to Holman and was the source of his initial interest in medicine, as well as his opposition to war. Before beginning his Rhodes scholarship, Holman spent 3 months touring the Balkans with President Jordan, who was lecturing on the need for peace and the perils of war." - James B.D. Mark, MD, "Historical Perspectives of The American Association for Thoracic Surgery: Emile Frederic Holman, MD (1890â"1977)," HISTORICAL PERSPECTIVE| VOLUME 130, ISSUE 1, P206-207, JULY 01, 2005.
Data di pubblicazione: 1940
Da: Antiq. F.-D. Söhn - Medicusbooks.Com, Marburg, Germania
EUR 66,00
Quantità: 1 disponibili
Aggiungi al carrelloAnn. Surg., 112/ 5. - Philadelphia November 1940, 8°, pp.840-875, 17 Figs., 3 Graphs., orig. self wrappers. Rare Offprint! "In 1923, Lewis and Drury presented observations on arteriovenous fistulae in man and in the experimental animal which were quite limited in scope, in that the clinical fistulae were apparently not operated upon, and the experiments dealt only with the immediate effects of a fistula in an animal which did not survive the experiment. Because of the obvious limitations of such observations, a number of the conclusions which were drawn up have since proved untenable. More specifically, cardiac output was said to be unchanged, whereas numerous observations indicate that it is markedly increased and even doubled in the presence of a fistula. Fistulae were said not to affect venous pressure, although some of their own observations, and many observations by others, show a very definite increase and sometimes doubling of venous pressure proximal to a fistula, depending on the size of the fistula. The dilatation of the heart was said to lie due to the effect of deficient nutrition incident to a lowering of mean arterial pressures, whereas Green showed an increased coronary flow due to systolic elevation, and others have demonstrated a degree of cardiac hypertrophy in dilated but properly functioning hearts totally incompatible with a deficient nourishment of cardiac muscle." Holman "Holman, in 1924, seems to have been the first to report an increase in blood volume in animals in which arteriovenous fistulas had been produced, with a return to normal level following the removal of these lesions. In his method the dye brilliant vital red was used to determine the blood volume. Four minutes after the dye was injected a sample of blood was drawn. The five animals in which he had produced particularly large arteriovenous communications all showed an increased blood volume, and in general the increase appeared to be related to the size of the fistula. Similar blood volume studies were reported later in clinical cases of arteriovenous fistulas, the increased blood volume in most instances returning to normal after correction of the lesions." Daniel C. Elkin: Arterial Aneurysms and Arteriovenous Fistulas. AMEED Center of History and Heritage "Holman was the first to bring the Halstedian tradition to the West Coast. He established not only a surgical residency program but also the Halsted Laboratory of Surgical Research, in which he and a number of his faculty carried out important experiments. Holman is best known for his work on arteriovenous fistulas. His initial publication on this subject was in 1923, and his final one was in 1971. In between, he wrote more than 40 papers reflecting both laboratory and clinical observations and experimentation in this field. His original monograph, entitled "Arteriovenous Aneurysms: Abnormal Communications Between the Arterial and Venous," published in Circulation in 1937, had been awarded the coveted Samuel Gross prize of the Philadelphia Academy of Surgery in 1930. " James B. D. Mark: Historical Perspectives of The American Association for Thoracic Surgery: Emile Frederic Holman, MD (1890-1977). JTCVS, 130/1 (2005): pp.206-207.
Data di pubblicazione: 1926
Da: Antiq. F.-D. Söhn - Medicusbooks.Com, Marburg, Germania
EUR 88,00
Quantità: 1 disponibili
Aggiungi al carrelloArch. Neurol. Psychiat., 15. - Chicago, March 1926, 8°, 10 pp., orig. wrappers. Rare Offprint "Disturbances in the act of urination in the conscious, rational person are a frequent accompaniment of spinal cord disease, and in most instances are attributed to pathologic alterations in the lumbar and sacral regions involving the lower cord "center" for micturition. The retention of urine which accompanies upper spinal cord tumors suggests, however, that these urinary difficulties may be due to some interference with the passing of impulses from a higher center, and additional evidence in support of this view is obtained from a study of similar urinary disturbances associated with intracranial tumors located in the posterior fossa. In these cases there is no question of a lower cord lesion." Emile Holman Emile Frederic Holman, MD (1890-1977).
Data di pubblicazione: 1923
Da: Antiq. F.-D. Söhn - Medicusbooks.Com, Marburg, Germania
EUR 130,00
Quantità: 1 disponibili
Aggiungi al carrelloArch. Neurol. Psychiat., 7. - Chicago, American Medical Association, July 1923, 8°, 19 pp., 11 Figs., orig. wrappers. Rare Offprint! From the surgicalk clinic of the John Hopkins Hospital and the Hunterian Laboratory of Experimental Surgery. "Cardiac hypertrophy and proximal dilatation of the artery have been so frequently associated with arteriovenous fistulas that it has long seemed highly probable that there must be some causative relationship between the two. That such a relation exists has been denied by clinicians, both ancient and modern, and the association of the two conditions clinically has been attributed to a coincidence. It was a problem that aroused the interest of the late Professor Halsted many years ago, and was for him a subject of constant speculation. Speaking before the American Surgical Asso-tion1 in 1918, he said: "If the assumption is correct that the heart dilates in consequence of the fistula, it is important that the fact should be brought to the attention not only of surgeons but also of pathologists and internists who apparently have altogether overlooked it . . . When a causative relationship . . . shall have become convincingly established, we may find that some unexplained dilations of the heart are referable to hitherto undetected changes in the walls and lumen of the blood vessels." Holman "Holman was the first to bring the Halstedian tradition to the West Coast. He established not only a surgical residency program but also the Halsted Laboratory of Surgical Research, in which he and a number of his faculty carried out important experiments. Holman is best known for his work on arteriovenous fistulas. His initial publication on this subject was in 1923, and his final one was in 1971. In between, he wrote more than 40 papers reflecting both laboratory and clinical observations and experimentation in this field. His original monograph, entitled "Arteriovenous Aneurysms: Abnormal Communications Between the Arterial and Venous," published in Circulation in 1937, had been awarded the coveted Samuel Gross prize of the Philadelphia Academy of Surgery in 1930. " James B. D. Mark: Historical Perspectives of The American Association for Thoracic Surgery: Emile Frederic Holman, MD (1890-1977). JTCVS, 130/1 (2005): pp.206-207.