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Galen on “syncope”

International Journal of Cardiology, 2010
This paper studies the Galenic views on syncope. According to Galen, syncope is a sudden prostration of the vital powers, without suspension of the respiration and it is usually a sign or complication of fever. He believed that "cardiac syncope" was a primary illness of the mouth of the oesophagus or of the stomach that affected the heart "by sympathy",
Niki, Papavramidou, Dimitrios, Tziakas
openaire   +2 more sources

Galen's Psychology

Perspectives in Biology and Medicine, 1961
Galen (a.D. 129-99), the most famous medical figure of the GraecoRoman period, was second only to Hippocrates as the greatest physician of antiquity. Unlike the "Father of Medicine," who divulged almost nothing about his own life and personality, Galen interspersed his medical writings with much detailed autobiographical information. And while there is
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Galen on the Temperaments

The Journal of General Psychology, 1947
(1947). Galen on the Temperaments. The Journal of General Psychology: Vol. 36, No. 1, pp. 45-64.
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Galen

Annals of medical history
Abstract After his early studies in Pergamum, where he was born in 129, Galen trained with the best physicians and philosophers in Smyrna, Corinth, and Alexandria before returning to his hometown, where he served as physician to the gladiators. Building on his early medical successes, particularly with the treatment of wounds (reflecting
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Galen and his anatomic eponym: Vein of Galen

Clinical Anatomy, 2004
AbstractGalen or Galenus was born at Pergamum (now Bergama in Turkey) in 129 A.D., and died in the year 200 A.D. He was a 2nd century Greek philosopher‐physician who switched to the medical profession after his father dreamt of this calling for his son. Galen's training and experiences brought him to Alexandria and Rome and he rose quickly to fame with
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Galen

2017
After remaining for a long time in Hippocrates’ shadow, the Galenic corpus has attracted considerable scholarly attention since the 1970s. Born in Pergamum, Roman Asia Minor, in 129 ce, Galen was the most influential physician in antiquity after Hippocrates of Cos (flourished c. 425 bce) and considered himself to be the latter’s legitimate heir.
  +5 more sources

Galen

1996
Abstract The next major figure, the physician, medical writer, and philosopher Galen, is one of the most accomplished intellectuals of the second century, a man of standing in his own time and hugely influential afterwards. Galen was born in Pergamum in 129 into the heart of second sophistic society.
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Galen’s place in Avicenna’s The Canon of Medicine: Respect, confirmation and criticism

Journal of Integrative Medicine, 2020
Sajjad Sadeghi   +2 more
exaly  

Scepter mini assisted angiographic cure of a Vein of Galen Malformation with n-butyl cyanoacrylate

Interventional Neuroradiology, 2021
Timothy G White, Amir R Dehdashti
exaly  

Galen on Erasistratus

Perspectives in Biology and Medicine, 1987
openaire   +2 more sources

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