Published by Michigan : Ann Arbor, 1936
Seller: Librairie Diona, Lattes, France
First Edition
Couverture souple. Condition: Bon. Edition originale. In-8° broché, paginé de 430 à 442 Reprinted from The Journal of Nervous and Mental Disease, Vol. 83, N° 4, April, 1936.
Publication Date: 1936
Seller: Librairie Diona, Lattes, France
First Edition
Couverture souple. Condition: Bon. Edition originale. In-8° broché, 8 pages Reprinted from The Journal of Pediatrics St. Louis, Vol. 9, N° 2, August, 1936.
Publication Date: 1937
Seller: Librairie Diona, Lattes, France
First Edition
Couverture souple. Condition: Très bon. Edition originale. In-8° broché, paginé de 397 à 410 Reprinted from The Journal of Nervous and Mental Disease, Vol. 85, N° 4, April, 1937.
Published by Smith Kline & French Laboratories Ltd
Seller: Book Souk, Porstoy, United Kingdom
Soft cover. Condition: Very Good. 120 grams. G:F13a.
Publication Date: 1961
Seller: Antiq. F.-D. Söhn - Medicusbooks.Com, Marburg, Germany
Neurology, 11/ 9. - Minneapolis, September 1961, 8°, 778-791, orig. wrappers. Rare Offprint! "From the Departments of Neurology and Ophthalmology, University of Michigan Medical School, Ann Arbor. Read on the eighty-fifth annual meeting of the American Neurological Association, Boston, June 13, 1960." "During Determination of the prognosis of certain of the brain stem vascular syndromes, some detail had been gathered concerning that of the posterior inferior cerebellar artery (Wallenberg's retroolivary or lateral medullary syndrome). This unique neurologic entity has attracted the attention of generations of neurologists since the first report of Alexander Marcet' in 1813, who described the case of another physician who recounted his own symptoms. The list of those who have written since on this subject is extensive, as revealed in the detailed bibliography given bv Louis Bar. It became evident that, in spite of the many reports of this syndrome in the literature and a few detailed analyses, there was much that was unexplained and of interest. Therefore, a further study of our cases was carried out from the point of view of symptomatology and anatomic localization. What follows is a detailed analysis of the symptoms in relation to each other and to the presumed location of the infarct. The ideas presented are gained strictly from clinical analysis and anatomic reasoning; no pathologic correlation was available for the present group of cases. Of the original 75 patients with syndromes of the superior, anterior inferior, and posterior inferior cerebellar arteries, ." Robert D. Currier (1925-2003).