TOME 1 : Syphilis - Tuberculose - Cancer - Appareil Digestif : 1936 / 800 pages. TOME 2 : Sang - Coeur - Vaisseaux - Reins - Appareil Respiratoire : 1936 / Paginé de 802 à 1691. TOME 3 : Système Nerveux - Glandes Endocrines - Maladies Humorales et Infectueuses : 1936 / Paginé de 1694 à 2734. Editions Masson & Cie. Reliés au format : 17 x 25 cm.
Reliures en toile en bel état malgré d'infimes taches et les titres de dos légèrement estompés. Dos légèrement déboité des cahiers, des rousseurs éparses présentent sur les pages. Les 3 volumes restent en bon état.
MASSON ET CIE. 1936. In-8. Relié toilé. Bon état, Couv. convenable, Dos satisfaisant, Intérieur frais. 2734 + 48 pages.. . . . Classification Dewey : 610-Sciences médicales. Médecine
Classification Dewey : 610-Sciences médicales. Médecine
MASSON & CIE. SEPTEMBRE 1939. In-8. Broché. Bon état, Couv. convenable, Dos satisfaisant, Intérieur frais. 52 pages.. . . . Classification Dewey : 610-Sciences médicales. Médecine
Congrès des médecins aliénistes et neurologistes de france et des pays de langues française Classification Dewey : 610-Sciences médicales. Médecine
DELACHAUX & NIESTLE 1947 - br.276p.
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Basel, Johannes Herwagen Vater und Sohn. 1556. 32,3x20,5 cm. 15 n.n. Bl., 1 w. Bl., 358 S., 82 S. Mit der Holzschnittdruckervignette auf dem Titel. Pergamentband auf 4 Bünden der Zeit mit blindgeprägtem Deckelmedaillon und dreifacher Deckelfiletierung.
VD16 B 8568. - Durling 3561. - Griechischer Geist aus Basler Pressen 357. - Erster Druck der 3. Übersetzung des Gesamtwerkes durch den Mediziner Janus Carnarius (1500-1558), Professor in Marburg und ab 1557 in Jena. Vorher war er Stadtphysikus in Zwickau, Nordhausen und Frankfurt a.M. Früh in Basel mit Erasmus von Rotterdam befreundet, wechselte er von der Philologie in die Medizin. Er übersetzte viele der griechischen Klassiker, gleichwohl diese bereits in weiteren Interpretationen vorlagen. In seiner Vorrede begründet er die Notwendigkeit, die klassischen Texte einem breiteren Publikum in verschiedenen Versionen vorzulegen. Den Texten des Paulus hängte er seine Kommentare in 82 Seiten als Anhang an. - Der zeitgenössische Einband mit alter Lederrestauration über den Rückenkanten, diese angebrochen. Stellenweise etwas stockfleckig. Unterschnitt mit handschriftlichem Titel.- Selten.
Editions de la pensee Moderne. 1963. In-8. Broché. Etat d'usage, Tâchée, Dos satisfaisant, Non coupé. 318 pages, jaquette bords frottés.. Avec Jaquette. . . Classification Dewey : 618-Autres branches de la médecine
"Tous les moyens ""interdits"" pour combrattre l'impuissance et la frigidité. Classification Dewey : 618-Autres branches de la médecine"
Paris De l'imprimerie de Didot le Jeune 1835 in 4 (26x20) 1 fascicule broché, sous couverture muette de papier ancien, 16 pages. Thèse présentée et soutenue à l'Ecole de Médecine de Paris, le 27 août 1835. Jean-Hippolyte Pauly, d'Ahun, département de la Creuse. Bon exemplaire ( Photographies sur demande / We can send pictures of this book on simple request )
Bon
Partitions sur le Métier,Partitions sur la Santé et médecine,Partitions illustrées VIE QUOTIDIENNE Le Bailly,Bornemann 1869 approx.
Bon état Petit format
Lille, Sautai, 1936. In-8 broché, 78 pages, 10 clichés radios h.t. Dos très lég. frotté, qqs lég. rousseurs sur la couverture, envoi autographe de l'auteur page de faux titre.
Historiquen expérimentation, base de la méthode, Physiopathologie, technique radiologique, diagnostic différentiel, diagnostic topographique...
Paris : Société d'éditions scientifiques, 1897,In-16,broché, 146 p.,dos renforcé,
Bon état Remise de 20% pour toutes commandes égales ou supérieures à 200 €
Masson et Cie 1940 1 vol. broché grand in-8, broché, 341 pp., nombreux dessins et photos en noir. Dos un peu usé, sinon bon état général.
Le François, 1946. In-12 broché, 157 pages. Illustré de dessins dans le texte par Joseph HEMARD. TRES BEL ENVOI DE L'AUTEUR. Bel exemplaire, non coupé. Edition originale.
%ASSON ET CIE. 1930. In-8. Broché. Bon état, Couv. convenable, Dos satisfaisant, Intérieur frais. 189 pages. Nombreuses illustrations en noir et blanc dans le texte.. . . . Classification Dewey : 610-Sciences médicales. Médecine
Classification Dewey : 610-Sciences médicales. Médecine
Paris, Octave Doin et Fils, 1912. 13 x 18, 1304 pp., 50 figures, reliure d'édition pleine percaline ocre, bon état.
Traduit par Mme. I. Trifonoff. Préface du Professeur Gley. P. Legrand, 1929. Grand in-8, 418 pages. Broché.(petites rousseurs sur le début de l'ouvrage).
PAVLOV, BYKOV, IVANOV-SMOLENSKI, JOUKOV-BEREJNIKOV, MAISKI, KALINITCHENKO, MIASNIKOV.
Reference : 6905
Paris, Centre culturel et économique France-U.R.S.S., sans date. In-8, broché.
[6905]
Oxford, University Press, 1928 16,5 x 24,5, 430 pp., 18 figures, cartonné, toilé, Bon état - 4 tampons, qques taches rouille, qques chapitres marqués ou soulignés crayon noir ou rouge, E.O. en anglais, 2nd printing
IMP. BOURGES ET ROUSSIN. NON DATE. In-8. Broché. Bon état, Couv. partiel. décollorée, Dos satisfaisant, Intérieur acceptable. 32 pages.. . . . Classification Dewey : 610-Sciences médicales. Médecine
Classification Dewey : 610-Sciences médicales. Médecine
Genève, Alliance Culturelle du Livre (coll. "Les classiques de la médecine"), 1962. Gr. in-8°, 465p. Reliure similicuir rouge d'éditeur.
Introduction de M. Léon Binet. Troisième volume de cette collection.
Gonthier. 1963. In-12. Broché. Etat d'usage, Couv. convenable, Dos satisfaisant, Papier jauni. 222 pages.. . . . Classification Dewey : 610-Sciences médicales. Médecine
Collection bibliothèque médiations n°5 - Introduction de J.F.Le Ny. Classification Dewey : 610-Sciences médicales. Médecine
Cahiers de Médecine soviétique (Suppléments) 1953 9 vol. broché 9 fascicules in-8, agrafés, 303 pp. (pagination continue). Couverture du 1er fasc. poussiéreuse et passée. Infime tache en pied de la couverture du 9e fasc. Sinon bon état général.
Berlin, Akademie-Vlg., 1956, gr. in-8vo, mit Titelbild, kleiner Bibl. - Rundstempel auf Titelverso, Ln. Verlagseinbände. Rücken mit Bibl.-Zettel, sauberes und gut erhaltenes Exemplar.
Phone number : 41 (0)26 3223808
Weisbaden, J. F. Bergman, 1898. Large8vo. Bound uncut with the original wrappers in contemporary half cloth with marbled boards and gilt lettering to spine. Front wrapper partly detached and previous owner's inscription to top of front wrapper. Otherwise a fine and clean copy. XII, 199, (5) pp.
First German (and first in general) translation of Pavlov's seminal work on the digestion glands in which he demonstrated that the effects of feeding were transmitted to the gastric glands even when food was prevented from entering the stomach. (One Hundred Books Famous in Medicine 86). ""Pavlov summarized his experiments in a series of lectures given in 1896 and published in Russian the following year. A German translation appeared in 1898 and an English one in 1902. For his work on physiology of digestion Pavlov was awarded the Nobel Prize in 1904."" (One Hundred Books Famous in Medicine 86). ""Scientific Research In the years 1891-1903, Pavlov concentrated on the studies of the digestive system that were systematized in his Lectures on the Work of the Main Gastric Glands (1897) and won him a Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine (1904). In this research, Pavlov’s ""physiological thinking"" was embodied in the ""chronic experiment,"" and his analysis of data was structured by his metaphor of the digestive system as a precise and purposive chemical factory. For the chronic experiment, experimental dogs were prepared surgically with an operation designed to give the experimenter access to a digestive gland. Experiments began only after the dog had recovered and regained a ""normal"" state. These operations included the esophagotomy, which separated the cavities of the mouth and stomach, allowing Pavlov to use sham-feeding experiments to demonstrate the centrality of a psychic actor, appetite, in the first phase of digestive secretion. To study the second, nervous-chemical phase of digestion, he developed an innervated version of Heidenhain’s isolated stomach. In Pavlov’s isolated sac, the main stomach remained continuous with the digestive tract, but a smaller pouch, isolated from food by a mucous membrane, maintained its nervous connections to the larger stomach. For Pavlov, as a nervist, the innervation of the isolated sac assured that its glandular reactions would mirror those in the main stomach. Inserting a fistula in this small stomach, Pavlov and his co-workers measured the quantity and quality of its glandular secretions, which Pavlov analyzed in his ""characteristic secretory curves."" For Pavlov, these curves reflected the precise and purposive action of the glands as they processed different foods."" (DSB)Bibliotheca Walleriana 7257.
Wiesbaden, J. F. Bergmann, 1898. 8vo. In later half cloth with gilt lettering to spine. Ex-libris pasted on to pasted down front end-paper. Previous owner's name to title-page. A very fine and clean copy. XII, 199, (5) pp.
First German (and first in general) translation of Pavlov's seminal work on the digestion glands in which he demonstrated that the effects of feeding were transmitted to the gastric glands even when food was prevented from entering the stomach. (One Hundred Books Famous in Medicine 86). ""Pavlov summarized his experiments in a series of lectures given in 1896 and published in Russian the following year. A German translation appeared in 1898 and an English one in 1902. For his work on physiology of digestion Pavlov was awarded the Nobel Prize in 1904."" (One Hundred Books Famous in Medicine 86). ""Scientific Research In the years 1891-1903, Pavlov concentrated on the studies of the digestive system that were systematized in his Lectures on the Work of the Main Gastric Glands (1897) and won him a Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine (1904). In this research, Pavlov’s ""physiological thinking"" was embodied in the ""chronic experiment,"" and his analysis of data was structured by his metaphor of the digestive system as a precise and purposive chemical factory. For the chronic experiment, experimental dogs were prepared surgically with an operation designed to give the experimenter access to a digestive gland. Experiments began only after the dog had recovered and regained a ""normal"" state. These operations included the esophagotomy, which separated the cavities of the mouth and stomach, allowing Pavlov to use sham-feeding experiments to demonstrate the centrality of a psychic actor, appetite, in the first phase of digestive secretion. To study the second, nervous-chemical phase of digestion, he developed an innervated version of Heidenhain’s isolated stomach. In Pavlov’s isolated sac, the main stomach remained continuous with the digestive tract, but a smaller pouch, isolated from food by a mucous membrane, maintained its nervous connections to the larger stomach. For Pavlov, as a nervist, the innervation of the isolated sac assured that its glandular reactions would mirror those in the main stomach. Inserting a fistula in this small stomach, Pavlov and his co-workers measured the quantity and quality of its glandular secretions, which Pavlov analyzed in his ""characteristic secretory curves."" For Pavlov, these curves reflected the precise and purposive action of the glands as they processed different foods."" (DSB)Bibliotheca Walleriana 7257.
Montpellier, 1875.,In-4 broche,,48 p.Thèse/dissertation : Thèse/mémoire : sans couvertures
,envoi autographe signé page de titre,bon etat Remise de 20% pour toutes commandes égales ou supérieures à 200 €