|
Showing 1 - 3 of
3 matches in All Departments
Mild traumatic Brain Injury (mTBI or Concussion) is an increasingly
common public health issue in sports, military environments, and
life in today's active world. Despite a great deal of study and
public attention to this disorder, knowledge about optimal
diagnostic, prognostic, and treatment information remains lacking.
Neurosensory symptoms have been shown to be the most frequent
complications of mTBI in both the acute and chronic setting.
Neurosensory Disorders in Mild Traumatic Brain Injury brings
together both the basic science work as well as the clinical work
in mTBI into one volume to provide a comprehensive examination of
the neurosensory issues associated with this disorder. Coverage
includes chapters on defining mild Traumatic Brain Injury,
neurosensory consequences, neurosensory disorders in clinical
practice, and diagnosis and treatment for neurosensory disorders in
mTBI. This book is written for clinicians, researchers, residents
and students in neurology and neuroscience.
Leonard Sowerby's self-healing manual for women, TheLadies'
Dispensatory, emerged in England in 1652 amidst an abundance of
medical self-help books for the lay citizen. Written for both the
common patient and the amateur health provider, these manuals of
home remedies provided their readers with a variety of potential
solutions to common ailments or disease. Sowerby's Dispensatory was
written primarily for curing women's health problems, and in that
regard, focuses heavily on gynecologic problems (the Dispensatory
includes numerous preparations for inducing abortion), breast
complaints, personal hygiene and cosmetic applications. Balaban,
Erlen and Siderits have resurrected Sowerby's original manuscript
and have provided both historical and medical explanation of its
uses and usefulness. From a common garlic remedy to 'fortify the
brain' to 'a hog's heel, burned to powder' for easing colic, The
Ladies' Dispensatory is a delightfully unique look at health and
hygiene in the seventeenth century. Also inlcludes nine maps.
Leonard Sowerby's self-healing manual for women, The Ladies' Dispensatory, emerged in England in 1652 amidst an abundance of medical self-help books for the lay citizen. Written for both the common patient and the amateur health provider, these manuals of home remedies provided their readers with a variety of potential solutions to common ailments or disease. The editors have resurrected Sowerby's original manuscript and have provided both historical and medical explanation of its uses and usefulness. From a common garlic remedy to 'fortify the brain' to 'a hog's heel, burned to powder' for easing colic, The Ladies' Dispensatory is a delightfully unique look at health and hygiene in the seventeenth century.
|
You may like...
Ab Wheel
R209
R149
Discovery Miles 1 490
Catan
(16)
R1,150
R887
Discovery Miles 8 870
X-Men: Apocalypse
James McAvoy, Michael Fassbender, …
Blu-ray disc
R32
Discovery Miles 320
|