| 1902 - 850 pages
...369-377. [W", W1".] BAILLIK, MATTHKW. [Physician, St. George's Hospital.] [1760-1823.] 1793 a. — The morbid anatomy of some of the most important parts of the human body, xxviii 1-314 pp. 12°. London. [Wm.] 1794 a. — Anatomie des krankhaften Baues von einigen der wichtigsten... | |
| William F. Bynum, Roy Porter - 2002 - 444 pages
...Peachey, Memoir of William and John Hunter, pp. 150. Baillie, for example, explained in the preface to his Morbid Anatomy of Some of the Most Important Parts of the Human Body (1793) that his research in pathological anatomy was made possible by the following three conditions:... | |
| National Library of Medicine (U.S.) - 578 pages
...da cancer on win Baillie, Matthew, 1761-1823. A series of engravings, accompanied with explanation : which are intended to illustrate the morbid anatomy of some of the most impotant parts of the human body / by Matthew Baillie. — [Carlton, Vic.?] : Melbourne University... | |
| James V. Ricci - 1990 - 626 pages
...(1684-1766), A Treatise on the diseases of Women, Lond., Vol. II, p. 187, 1762; Matthew Baillie (1760-1823), The Morbid Anatomy of some of the most important parts of the human body, Lond., p. 230, 1833; J. Capuron (1767-1850), Traité des maladies des femmes, Paris, p. 188, 1817;... | |
| H.O. Lancaster - 1990 - 636 pages
...can be regarded as the founder of pathological anatomy. M. Baillie (1761-1823), in 1795, published Morbid Anatomy of some of the most Important Parts of the Human Body, the first English text on pathology and the first systematic study of pathology in any language. The... | |
| Waldemar L. Olszewski - 1991 - 650 pages
...We acknowledge extensive collaboration with Drs. E. Rector and P. Watson. REFERENCES l. Baillie, M., The Morbid Anatomy of Some of the Most Important Parts of the Human Body, Johnson & Nicol, London, l793. 2. Carr, I., Lymphatic Metastasis, Cancer Metastasis Rev., l, 307, l983.... | |
| Charles E. Rosenberg, Janet Lynne Golden - 1992 - 360 pages
...Diseases ( 1 76 1 ; reprint ed. New York: New York Academy of Medicine, 1960). 10. Matthew Baillie, The Morbid Anatomy of Some of the Most Important Parts of the Human Body, 2d ed. (London: J.Johnson, 1797). 11. David Dundas, "An Account of a Peculiar Disease of the Heart,"... | |
| V.C. Medvei - 1993 - 582 pages
...this enlargement in his Novum Vasorum Carports Humant Systema441 and Matthew Baillie (1761-1823) in The Morbid Anatomy of some of the Most Important Parts of the Human Body41. Baillie, from Lanarkshire, was a nephew of William Hunter and physician to George III. He was... | |
| John Daintith - 1994 - 530 pages
...inherited William Hunter's house and medical school at Windmill Street in 1783. Baillie's major work was the Morbid Anatomy of Some of the Most Important Parts of the Human Body (1793). This was a pioneering work, illustrated by a series of engravings, that BAKEWELL helped establish... | |
| José María Valoria Villamartín - 1994 - 974 pages
...secondary hemorrhage after electrocoagulation treatment. Angiology 1984; 5: 511-514. 56. Baillie M. The morbid anatomy of some of the most important parts of the human body. Albany, Barber and Southwick, 1795. 57. Morrin FJ. Spontaneous perforation of primary jejunal ulcers.... | |
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