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Eponym

European Journal of Pediatrics, 2010
Rasmussen's syndrome (RS) is a rare acquired progressive inflammatory encephalopathy characterized by drug-resistant partial seizures and cognitive deterioration resulting from a gradual impairment and a subsequent atrophy of a single brain hemisphere. It was firstly described by Theodore Rasmussen in 1958.
MASTRANGELO, Mario   +2 more
  +14 more sources

Eponyms — are they relevant?

Injury, 2000
This study was performed to investigate the value of eponyms of fractures amongst orthopaedic/casualty trainees. Our results show eponyms are not favoured.
M, Kishore   +4 more
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Eponyms in Orthopaedics

The Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery-American Volume, 2001
Eponym (epó-nim) [Greek eponymos, named after] The name of a disease, structure, operation, or procedure, derived from the name of the person who discovered or described it first. Argot (äŕgõ) [French origin "in thieves' jargon"] The specialized vocabulary and idioms of those in the same work. Eponyms are commonly used in orthopaedics.
J L, Visotsky, L S, Benson
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Saving the eponym

International Journal of Dermatology, 2005
Despite the rich history and legacy that an eponym brings, there are those inclined to drop the use of eponyms or to discourage such naming in the future. 2 Some argue that eponyms have no meaning to the patient and often the physician; for example, acute febrile neutrophilic dermatosis describes the nature and features of a disease, whereas its eponym,
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Eponyms of the Kager Triangle

Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery, 2012
The area of the Kager triangle contains numerous structures, diseases, approaches, or tests that are described with the use of eponyms1-6. Even the triangle itself is an eponym, named for Dr. Hans Kager7. The Kager triangle, also known as the pre-Achilles fat pad, is the region bordered by the superior part of the calcaneus, the flexor hallucis longus ...
Wiegerinck, Johannes I.   +3 more
openaire   +3 more sources

On eponyms

Survey of Ophthalmology, 2021
openaire   +2 more sources

Eponyms

Annals of Internal Medicine, 1988
K D, Burman   +5 more
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Eponyms

JAMA: The Journal of the American Medical Association, 1970
openaire   +4 more sources

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