Charcot, Bouchard, Brissaud - Trattato di Medicina - 1896
Nr. 83768933
G. F. Lobstein - Memoria anatomico-fisiologico-patologica... malattie del grande nervo simpatico dell'uomo - 1834
Nr. 83768933
G. F. Lobstein - Memoria anatomico-fisiologico-patologica... malattie del grande nervo simpatico dell'uomo - 1834
G. F. Lobstein - Memoria anatomico-fisiologico-patologica, su la struttura, le funzioni e le malattie del grande nervo simpatico dell'uomo
- Published 1834
- Contains 10 fold-out plates to the rear, 6 of which are coloured
- The plates depicts different nerves & ganglions from the sympathetic nervous system
- Contains numerous hand-written early inscriptions on separate papers, attached onto the books' existing pages
- Marbled decorations to front and rear boards
- Gilt lettering and decorations to spine
An incredibly rare, beautifully-illustrated, elegant collector's item.
Jean Georges Chrétien Frédéric Martin Lobstein (8 May 1777 – 7 March 1835) was a German-born, French pathologist and surgeon who was a native of Giessen. He was the nephew of noted surgeon Johann Friedrich Lobstein (1736-1784).
In 1803 he earned his doctorate at the University of Strasbourg, subsequently working as an anatomical prosector as well as an assistant to the médecin-accoucheur en chef at the Civil Hospital (Strasbourg). In 1805 he became a professor at École d'obstétrique du Rhin inférieur (School of Obstetrics of the Lower Rhine), where he ultimately served for thirty years. In 1819 he attained a professorship in pathological anatomy.
Jean Lobstein is remembered for contributions made in the field of pathological anatomy. He coined the term 'osteoporosis.' He also described a disorder known today as osteogenesis imperfecta type I, which is sometimes called "Lobstein's disease". This disease is an hereditary, generalized connective tissue disorder characterized by bone fragility and a blue-gray sclerae of the eyes. In 1813 he founded an impressive pathological museum in Strasbourg, a collection that remained intact until the years following the Franco-Prussian War, when its artifacts were either dispersed or lost.
Lobstein's best written effort was an unfinished four-volume work titled "Traité d’anatomie pathologique", being based on his personal experiences as a pathologist. In its second volume he coined the word "arteriosclerosis" in a section on arterial disease. In addition to his work in medicine, he was an avid archaeologist, historian and numismatist.
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