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Published by Thieme 2006-09-06, Stuttgart, 2006
ISBN 10: 3134535025ISBN 13: 9783134535020
Seller: Blackwell's, London, United Kingdom
Book
hardback. Condition: New. Language: ENG.
Published by Georg Thieme, Stuttgart / C.V. Mosby Company,, 1967
Seller: Versandantiquariat Kerstin Daras, Düsseldorf, NRW, Germany
Book
Rücken etwas aufgehellt; vorderdeckel im Rand schwach angeknickt; insgesamt sehr sauber - gut bis (innen) sehr gut erhalten. - On the whole nearly very fine. Stichworte: Mikro-Neurochirurgie. XII, 171 S., Englisch 410g 8° (Oktav, 18,5 bis 22,5 cm), kartoniert (Softcover).
Published by George Thieme Verlag, 1967
Seller: books4less (Versandantiquariat Petra Gros GmbH & Co. KG), Welling, Germany
Book
Broschiert. Condition: Gut. 171 Seiten; Der Erhaltungszustand des hier angebotenen Werks ist trotz seiner Bibliotheksnutzung sehr sauber. Es befindet sich neben dem Rückenschild lediglich ein Bibliotheksstempel im Buch; ordnungsgemäß entwidmet. Einbandkanten sind leicht bestoßen. In ENGLISCHER Sprache. Sprache: Englisch Gewicht in Gramm: 390.
Published by Stuttgart: Thieme/ St. Louis: C. V. Mosby, 1967., 1967
Seller: Scientia Books, ABAA ILAB, Arlington, MA, U.S.A.
First Edition
xii, 171 pp; 217 illustrations. Original wrappers. Spine sunned. Front wrapper unevenly sunned. Very Good. First Edition.
Published by St. Louis: C. V. Mosby/ Stuttgart: Thieme, 1967., 1967
Seller: Scientia Books, ABAA ILAB, Arlington, MA, U.S.A.
First Edition
xii, 171 pp; 217 illustrations. Original cloth. Very Good. First Edition.
Publication Date: 1967
Seller: Antiq. F.-D. Söhn - Medicusbooks.Com, Marburg, Germany
Book
Stuttgart, Georg Thieme Verlag & St. Louis, Mo., The C.V. Mosby Company, 1967, 8°, XII, 171 pp., 217 illustrations, orig. kart. Einband. Report of First Conference, October 6.-7, 1966 ;ary Fletcher Hospital, Burlington, Vermont. "Theodore Kurze (1922-2002), at the University of Southern California, became the first neurosurgeon to use the microscope in the operating room on August 1,1957. He removed a neurilemoma of the seventh cranial nerve in a 5-year-old patient, learning how to use the microscope from a year of practicing middle ear dissections in William House's (1923-2012) laboratory. Early support for the operating microscope in neurosurgery was similar to the endoscope's acceptance several decades later, with some even saying that it was "ridiculous" to bring it into the operating room. This perspective changed through several early supporters, one of whom was Gazi Yasargil. In 1966 Hugo Krayenbühl (1902-1985), chief of neurosurgery in Zurich, Switzerland, sent Yasargil to R.M.P. Donaghy's (1910-1991) microsurgical laboratory in Vermont. There, Yasargil spent a year perfecting his microsurgical techniques, including the superficial temporal artery-middle cerebral artery bypass in animals, which he then successfully performed in a human on October 30,1967. Together, Donaghy and Yasargil organized the first microvascular symposium in October 1966. Yasargil, perhaps more than anyone, adapted the ideas of surgeons such as Kurze, Jacobson, and Donaghy and developed microsurgery into an integral part of modern neurosurgery. Ultimately, improved illumination and magnification allowed better precision from the surgeon and his technique, resulting in significant changes to the frontotemporal craniotomy in this same era." Ryan Ormond & Costas G. Hadjipanayis: The history of neurosurgery and its relation to the development and refinement of the frontotemporal craniotomy. Neurosurg Focus 36 (April 2014).