Artigo Revisado por pares

The Changing Pattern of Neurologic Medicine

1952; Massachusetts Medical Society; Volume: 246; Issue: 22 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1056/nejm195205292462201

ISSN

1533-4406

Autores

D. Denny‐Brown,

Tópico(s)

Infectious Encephalopathies and Encephalitis

Resumo

GEORGE CHEYNE SHATTUCK (1784–1854), for whom this lecture was named, adorns that period of medicine that boasts Richard Bright, Thomas Addison, Thomas Hodgkin and Robert Graves. His special attributes were his clinical wisdom, his benevolence and his vision. It was chiefly through him that medicine in New England was set on a firm basis of clinicopathological correlation. The period is notable for the development of the art of clinical observation. In contrast, the first fifty years of the present century will probably be recognized in medical history by the enormous development of methods of measuring pathologic deviations in the living. . . .

Referência(s)