Splanchnology - The study or discourse of the viscera (guts) - Greek: Splanchn(o), "viscera". Stomach (organ) - From Latin stomachus, "throat, gullet, stomach" [also "pride, indignation", since those...
For a professional display without a frame get a custom display plaque! Printed with a dye-sublimation process, your image colors are put directly on the hardboard panel for a stunningly crisp image. Protected with a UV resistant gloss, your plaque will be protected from scratches and fading for years to come. Dimensions: 8" x 10" Hardboard panel with UV resistant coating Comes with attached easel stand Easy wipe-clean surface Designer Tip: To ensure the highest quality print, please note that this product’s customizable design area measures 8" x 10". For best results please add 1/8" bleed .
For a professional display without a frame get a custom display plaque! Printed with a dye-sublimation process, your image colors are put directly on the hardboard panel for a stunningly crisp image. Protected with a UV resistant gloss, your plaque will be protected from scratches and fading for years to come. Dimensions: 8" x 10" Hardboard panel with UV resistant coating Comes with attached easel stand Easy wipe-clean surface Designer Tip: To ensure the highest quality print, please note that this product’s customizable design area measures 8" x 10". For best results please add 1/8" bleed .
The incomparable Michael Sappol--author of A Traffic of Dead Bodies, curator of Dream Anatomy, and historian at the National Library of Medicine--recently traveled to Sweden where he encountered the curious 15th century illuminated vellum scroll seen above. In the following post, Mike tells us more about this scroll, and its idiosyncratic anatomical visualizations: I recently traveled to sunny Sweden to participate in an international conference on “The History of Medicine in Practice.” Along the way I got to visit some historical medical collections, talk to historians, curators, archivists, rare book specialists, publishers and librarians, and see amazing objects. Today’s post is about one amazing object: De Arte Phisicali et de Cirurgica (The Art of the Physician and the Surgeon), a long vellum scroll — 542 cm (17 feet 9 inches) by 36 cm (1 foot 2 inches)! It dates from the year 1412 and resides today in the National Library of Sweden (in Swedish, Kungliga Biblioteket, “The Royal Library,” but since Swedes hold their egalitarian ideals very dear, usually translated as “The National Library”). The manuscript is composed of six skins of vellum (that’s calf-skin!) sewn together. It features numerous painted color illustrations, along with a text written by John Arderne (1307-ca. 1390), a master surgeon who lived in Newark in the county of Nottingham, England. How it got to Sweden is a bit of a mystery, but experts believe that it traveled over the North Sea sometime in the 1420s, sent by King Henry IV of England to help his daughter, Princess Philippa. She had been married off to King Erik of Sweden in 1406 at the tender age of 12 (and died in 1430 at age 34 of a miscarriage). The text (in Latin) contains standard medical wisdom of its time: advice on diagnosis and how to treat various conditions in the form of a discussion of cases, along with helpful recipes. (A knowledge of astrology helps with all of this.) The scroll is also supplied with a large number of good-natured, even comical, illustrations. Mostly they show the usual diseases and problems (dysentery, dropsy, colic, pleurisy, belching, insomnia, bellyache) and the usual therapeutic methods (bleeding, cautery, purging and plastering). There are also pictures of surgical instruments, poisonous animals (watch out for toads!) and typical problems of delivering a baby. What has attracted the most attention from scholars, and even the public, are the scroll’s painted illustrations of the anatomized body, split open like a book or a butchered animal. These occupy the middle of the scroll, between the two main columns of text (which makes no comment on them), and are very rare for the period, really quite astonishing. I know all this because of a fine book recently published on the Arderne scroll by Fri Tanke Förlag (Free Thought Press) and the Hagströmer Library, as part of their bibliographic publication series: John Arderne, De Arte Phisicali et de Cirurgia, trans., commentary, Torgny Svenberg and Peter Murray Jones; afterword, Eva LQ Sandgren (Stockholm: Fri Tanke Förlag – Hagströmer Biblioteket, 2014). Michael Sappol History of Medicine Division National Library of Medicine All images from De Arte Phisicali et de Cirurgica (The Art of the Physician and the Surgeon), courtesy of the National Library of Sweden
Author: Andreas Vesalius (Flemish, Brussels 1514–1564 Zakynthos, Greece). Artist: John of Calcar (John Stephen Calcar) (Netherlandish, Calcar, Cleves 1499...
Детальная визуализация КТ сканов. #som_anatomy
Antique Brain Chart Poster based on an illustration from the 1800s. This print is a lovely addition to your home or living room decor. ✓ Printed in Berlin at our Atelier. ✓ Made in Germany to Order. ✓ UV-resistant Japanese archival inks, fine art paper, and 100% cotton canvas. ✓ Fast Shipping Worldwide in a protective cardboard tube. No Frame or Hanging System included.
Explore pilllpat (agence eureka)'s 59361 photos on Flickr!
Gruesome yet exquisite, these drawings of the living – and the dead – hark back to a time when the cutting edge of medicine was, frankly, terrifying
Welcome to an extraordinary journey into the world of natural medicine, where the power of nature meets the art of healing. Natural medicine, also known as alte
Publication: Bethesda, MD : U.S. National Library of Medicine, National Institutes of Health, Health & Human Services, [2010] Language(s): French Format: Still image Subject(s): Face -- anatomy & histology Anatomy, Cross-Sectional Cadaver Genre(s): Book Illustrations Abstract: Image of frontal view of man's face showing the specific parts: rétine, graisse orbitaire, cloison des fosses nasales, cornet inférieur, 1re grosse molaire, sillon glosso-gingival, nerf lingual, muscle génio-glosse, sinus frontal, cornet moyen, sinus maxillaire, méat inférieur, buccinateur, muscle hyo-glosse, muscle mylo-hyoïdien, ventre antérieur du digastrique. Issued in seven installments by the flamboyant Parisian surgeon Eugène-Louis Doyen (1859-1916), this atlas of 279 "heliotyped" photographic plates of cross-sectioned bodies was a radical departure from past practice. Atlas d'anatomie topographique, Planche 11. Related Title(s): Hidden treasure Is part of: Atlas d'anatomie topographique; See related catalog record: 61030150R Extent: 1 online resource (1 image) NLM Unique ID: 101595266 NLM Image ID: A033044 Permanent Link: resource.nlm.nih.gov/101595266 NLM Hidden treasure resource.nlm.nih.gov/101569502
It was last year that I dove deep into studying about Dr. Steven Porges' Polyvagal Theory. As a manual therapist and bodyworker I found many aspects of the theory relevant to me. Perhaps I will elaborate on what the Theory is another time, or you may have already heard about it. Today I want to share with you my sketches that helped me understand the anatomy of the vagus nerves and also how the poly-vagal theory translates into anatomy. A quick run down of the Autonomic Nervous System (ANS) fir
The incomparable Michael Sappol--author of A Traffic of Dead Bodies, curator of Dream Anatomy, and historian at the National Library of Medicine--recently traveled to Sweden where he encountered the curious 15th century illuminated vellum scroll seen above. In the following post, Mike tells us more about this scroll, and its idiosyncratic anatomical visualizations: I recently traveled to sunny Sweden to participate in an international conference on “The History of Medicine in Practice.” Along the way I got to visit some historical medical collections, talk to historians, curators, archivists, rare book specialists, publishers and librarians, and see amazing objects. Today’s post is about one amazing object: De Arte Phisicali et de Cirurgica (The Art of the Physician and the Surgeon), a long vellum scroll — 542 cm (17 feet 9 inches) by 36 cm (1 foot 2 inches)! It dates from the year 1412 and resides today in the National Library of Sweden (in Swedish, Kungliga Biblioteket, “The Royal Library,” but since Swedes hold their egalitarian ideals very dear, usually translated as “The National Library”). The manuscript is composed of six skins of vellum (that’s calf-skin!) sewn together. It features numerous painted color illustrations, along with a text written by John Arderne (1307-ca. 1390), a master surgeon who lived in Newark in the county of Nottingham, England. How it got to Sweden is a bit of a mystery, but experts believe that it traveled over the North Sea sometime in the 1420s, sent by King Henry IV of England to help his daughter, Princess Philippa. She had been married off to King Erik of Sweden in 1406 at the tender age of 12 (and died in 1430 at age 34 of a miscarriage). The text (in Latin) contains standard medical wisdom of its time: advice on diagnosis and how to treat various conditions in the form of a discussion of cases, along with helpful recipes. (A knowledge of astrology helps with all of this.) The scroll is also supplied with a large number of good-natured, even comical, illustrations. Mostly they show the usual diseases and problems (dysentery, dropsy, colic, pleurisy, belching, insomnia, bellyache) and the usual therapeutic methods (bleeding, cautery, purging and plastering). There are also pictures of surgical instruments, poisonous animals (watch out for toads!) and typical problems of delivering a baby. What has attracted the most attention from scholars, and even the public, are the scroll’s painted illustrations of the anatomized body, split open like a book or a butchered animal. These occupy the middle of the scroll, between the two main columns of text (which makes no comment on them), and are very rare for the period, really quite astonishing. I know all this because of a fine book recently published on the Arderne scroll by Fri Tanke Förlag (Free Thought Press) and the Hagströmer Library, as part of their bibliographic publication series: John Arderne, De Arte Phisicali et de Cirurgia, trans., commentary, Torgny Svenberg and Peter Murray Jones; afterword, Eva LQ Sandgren (Stockholm: Fri Tanke Förlag – Hagströmer Biblioteket, 2014). Michael Sappol History of Medicine Division National Library of Medicine All images from De Arte Phisicali et de Cirurgica (The Art of the Physician and the Surgeon), courtesy of the National Library of Sweden
Tutte le ragazze felici si somigliano; ogni ragazza infelice è infelice a modo suo.
JF Ptak Science Books Post 1367 This is the first installment of a chronology of the anatomical representation of the heart, along with a few metaphorical images tossed in. No commentary yet--just a quick post. All images are either from...
For the compulsive list makers like us in the crowd, you know the power of putting words on paper. Jotting that task down takes it out of our active brain space, freeing our gray matter up to focus on the work at hand. We no longer worry about recall; the printed word remains unalterable whenever we need to check the list. So it is with our collective human memory, it seems. “Before the printing press, memory was the main store of human knowledge, “notes the article “Memory and the Printing Press” in Farnam Street’s blog. “Scholars had to go to find books, often traveling around from one scriptoria to another. They couldn’t buy books. Individuals did not have libraries. The ability to remember was integral to the social accumulation of knowledge,” the article continues. What this meant, according to Elizabeth Eisenstein, author of The Printing Press as an Agent of Change, is that things had to be known in a profound and accessible way. This need created a complex system of associating bits of knowledge with other pieces to aid retention and recall. And naturally, the accuracy of the information was only as good as the memory of the people...
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This new title offers an unprecedented and remarkable journey into our collective corporal curiosity with breathtaking paintings and art.
By the time we started dating, Marc had already completed his BAA, but boy, I had no clue what I was getting myself into! Marc, firstly, is one of a select few people that I know that truly has the…
These unusual and downright odd images are from the US National Library of Medicine’s collection of more than 17 million items. Lowlights included an X-Ray of Adolf Hitler’s head, graphic illustrations of early-20th-century surgical techniques, images from a Russian book of clinical dermatology from 1887. We’ve featured medical images before on the site and many … Continue reading "Odd, Amazing And Unforgettable Objects From the US National Library of Medicine"
We have chosen for today's post some beautifully Surreal Art by Macedonian Artist Enkel Dika. We mainly wanted to feature his drawings based on anatomy, but we couldn't help ourselves, but to add, a few more of his artworks. His drawings are featured on society6, a company founded to bring together Artists from all around the world and to showcase them to the public. Mind Reader. Extraordinary Observer. Tree of Life. Moment Catcher. Optic Blast. Listen to Your Heart. The Legacy of the Bright Mind. Home Sweet Home. Time Travel. Unleashed Imagination Mown.
“Body” by Johan Thörnqvist
Ayurveda, known also as Ayurvedic medicine, is an ancient medical system that has its roots in India, and has been considered by many as one of the oldest healthcare systems in the world. In today’s society, Ayurvedic medicine is classified as a traditional, complementary, and/or alternative medicine.
I first came into contact with the illustrations of Frank Netter while in a small used bookstore in New England 25 years ago. They had a copy of “The CIBA Collection Of Medical Illustrations” from 1948. It’s an unassuming looking oversize volume in a blue cover, but contains a wild spin on what I’d always thought was a clinical, cut and dry world that would only be of interest to doctors, surgeons, and medical students. . . Frank H. Netter, M.D. (1906-1991) was a physician, a
Antique Brain Chart Poster based on an illustration from the 1800s. This print is a lovely addition to your home or living room decor. ✓ Printed in Berlin at our Atelier. ✓ Made in Germany to Order. ✓ UV-resistant Japanese archival inks, fine art paper, and 100% cotton canvas. ✓ Fast Shipping Worldwide in a protective cardboard tube. No Frame or Hanging System included.