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Books > Medicine > General issues > History of medicine
Anxiety, the latest volume in the Vitamins and Hormones series
first published in 1943, and the longest-running serial published
by Academic Press, provides up-to-date information on the roles
that hormones and other factors play in anxiety and stress. Each
volume focuses on a single molecule or disease that is related to
vitamins or hormones, with the topic broadly interpreted to include
related substances, such as transmitters, cytokines, growth
factors, and others thoroughly reviewed.
Headache: Through the Centuries illuminates the history of
headaches with a particular interest in how the disorder has been
understood and treated since the earliest recorded accounts, dating
from around 4000 BC. Different types of headache were being
recognized as early as the 2nd century AD. Over the years, though,
the classification of types of headache has changed so that
headache patterns described in the past are often difficult to
relate to present-day types of headache. Since that time, a great
deal of material on the topic has become available, the full gamut
of manifestations of the disorder has been described, and
considerable insight into its mechanisms has been obtained, though
no completely satisfactory explanation of the disorder has yet
become available. Providing an extensive history and the
development of our understanding of headache over the course of six
millennia, Headache: Through the Centuries is thought-provoking and
relevant reading for neurologists, medical historians, and anyone
interested in headaches.
Written by an immunologist, this book traces the concept of
immunity from ancient times up to the present day, examining how
changing concepts and technologies have affected the course of the
science. It shows how the personalities of scientists and even
political and social factors influenced both theory and practice in
the field. With fascinating stories of scientific disputes and
shifting scientific trends, each chapter examines an important
facet of this discipline that has been so central to the
development of modern biomedicine. With its biographical dictionary
of important scientists and its lists of significant discoveries
and books, this volume will provide the most complete historical
reference in the field.
Written in an elegant style by long-time practicing
immunologist
Discusses the changing theories and technologies that guided the
field
Tells of the exciting disputes among prominent scientists
Lists all the important discoveries and books in the field
Explains in detail the many Nobel prize-winning contributions of
immunologists"
Ernest Starling (1866-1927) was pre-eminent in the golden age of
British Physiology. His name is usually associated with his ???Law
of the Heart, ??? but his discovery of secretin (the first hormone
whose mode of action was explained) and his work on capillaries
were more important contributions. He coined the word 'hormone' one
hundred years ago. His analysis of capillary function demonstrated
that equal and opposite forces move across the capillary wall--an
outward (hydrostatic) force and an inward (osmotic) force derived
from plasma proteins.
Starling??'s contributions include:
*Developing the "Frank-Starling Law of the Heart," presented in
1915 and modified in 1919.
*The Starling equation, describing fluid shifts in the body (1896)
*The discovery of secretin, the first hormone, with Bayliss (1902)
and the introduction of the concept of hormones (1905).
The Global History of Paleopathology is the first comprehensive
global compendium on the history of paleopathology, an
interdisciplinary scientific discipline that focuses on the study
of ancient disease. Offering perspectives from regions that have
traditionally had long histories of paleopathology, such as the
United States and parts of Europe, this volume also presents
important work by an international roster of scholars who are
writing their own regional and cultural histories in the field. The
book identifies major thinkers and figures who have contributed to
paleopathology, as well as significant organizations and courses
that have sponsored scientific research and communication, most
notably the Paleopathology Association. The volume concludes with
an eye towards the future of the discipline, discussing methods and
research at the leading edge of paleopathology, particularly those
that employ the analysis of ancient DNA and isotopes.
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The Oregon State Insane Asylum was opened in Salem on October 23,
1883, and is one of the oldest continuously operated mental
hospitals on the West Coast. In 1913, the name was changed to the
Oregon State Hospital (OSH). The history of OSH parallels the
development and growth in psychiatric knowledge throughout the
United States. Oregon was active in the field of electroshock
treatments, lobotomies, and eugenics. At one point, in 1959, there
were more than 3,600 patients living on the campus. The
Oscar-winning movie One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest was filmed
inside the hospital in 1972. In 2008, the entire campus was added
to the National Register of Historic Places, and the state began a
$360-million restoration project to bring the hospital to modern
standards. The story of OSH is one of intrigue, scandal, recovery,
and hope.
Eugenic thought and practice swept the world from the late
nineteenth to the mid-twentieth century in a remarkable
transnational phenomenon that informed social and scientific policy
across the political spectrum, from liberal welfare measures in
emerging social-democratic states, to feminist ambitions for birth
control, to public health campaigns, to totalitarian dreams of the
"perfectibility of man." This book dispels for uninitiated readers
the automatic and apparently exclusive link between eugenics and
the Holocaust: the popularity of eugenics in Japan, for example,
comes as a surprise. It is the first world history of eugenics and
an indispensable core text for both teaching and research in what
has become a sprawling but ever more important field. Eugenics has
accumulated generations of interest as part of the question of how
experts think about the connections between biology, human capacity
and policy. In the past and the present, eugenics speaks to
questions of race, class, gender and sex, evolution, governance,
nationalism, disability, and the social implications of science. In
the current climate, where the human genome project, stem cell
research, and new reproductive technologies have proven so
controversial, the history of eugenics has much to teach us about
the relationship between scientific research, technology, and human
ethical decision-making. This volume offers both a
nineteenth-century context for understanding the emergence of
eugenics and a consideration of contemporary manifestations of, and
relationships to eugenics. It is the definitive text for students
and researchers to consult for careful and up-to-date summaries,
new substantive fields where very little work is currently
available (e.g. eugenics in Iran, South Africa, and South East
Asia); transnational thematic lines of inquiry; the integration of
literature on colonialism; and connections to contemporary issues.
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