Tag: Association of Military Surgeons of the United States
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Cancer is a crab
Sahanashree RajeshkumarRobbinsville, New Jersey, United States Somewhere around 2650 BCE, an Egyptian scribe described a patient with tumors of the breast, hard and resistant to pressure. When he turned to the question of treatment, he wrote what no patient wants to hear and no doctor… Read more
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The Spanish Civil War (1936–1939)
The Spanish Civil War was fought between the elected Republican government of Spain and the insurgent Nationalist forces led by General Francisco Franco. It determined the future of Spain and also served as a test prelude to World War II, drawing foreign volunteers and professional… Read more
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Gallbladder as Fig
Vivian NyePortland, Oregon, United States Artist statement Although lithiasis is painful and often clinically problematic, I like that our bodies participate in the same processes of accumulation and compaction found in nature. Much existing art emphasizes parallels between nature and other organs (e.g., lungs as… Read more
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The Greeks in Italy: History and medicine
Beginning around the eighth century BCE, Greek settlers established colonies along the southern coast of the Italian peninsula, notably in Cumae, Neapolis (Naples), Tarentum (Taranto), Sybaris, Croton, Rhegium (Reggio Calabria), and Syracuse. The region became known as Magna Graecia (“Greater Greece”), reflecting the strong influence… Read more
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Kumbhakarna, a sleeping giant: A medico-mythological exploration
B. Sadananda NaikMoodabidri, India Kumbhakarna, a gigantic brother of the legendary demon king Ravana, is depicted as one of the most powerful warriors in the Indian epic the Ramayana.1 Kumbhakarna became famous for his extraordinary sleep and enormous appetite. According to Hindu mythology, due to… Read more
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Beyond the fingerstick
Allison WangCalifornia, United States I was working the afternoon shift when, after three hours of walking under the sun, I was finally assigned to the blood sugar testing station. The days were long—eight-hour shifts that began at five in the morning as we drove into… Read more
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The death of Emperor Caesar Augustus
Augustus’s death in CE 14 ended one of the most remarkable lives in Roman history. Born Gaius Octavius in 63 BCE, he was adopted posthumously by Julius Caesar as his son and chief heir. After Julius Caesar’s assassination in 44 BCE, he formed an alliance… Read more
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Max Thorek: An ignored surgical superstar
Jayant RadhakrishnanChicago, Illinois, United States Much of what we know about Dr. Max Thorek is from his informative and eminently readable autobiography A Surgeon’s World, which is sprinkled with entertaining and enlightening vignettes.1 Max Thorek (1880–1960) was born in a town in the Tátra mountains… Read more
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Proust’s medical madeleine: Medicine and the making of À la recherche du temps perdu
Vivian McAlisterLondon, Ontario, Canada Marcel Proust was expected to waste his life. To acquaintances of the Proust family, he appeared charming, delicate, over-refined, and incapacitated by an illness that seemed to excuse him from the ordinary obligations of career and usefulness. Valentine Thomson, remembering the… Read more
