Weitere Beispiele werden automatisch zu den Stichwörtern zugeordnet - wir garantieren ihre Korrektheit nicht.
While at this hospital he did all of the operative surgery.
A person with it has a much higher chance of surviving extensive operative surgery than one without.
He taught also pathology, surgical anatomy, and operative surgery.
He became professor of operative surgery in 1899 at the University of Copenhagen.
It was translated into English in 1898 as "Atlas and epitome of operative surgery".
Here he gained his first actual experience in operative surgery that was henceforth to be his specialty.
"This man needs immediate operative surgery.
His greatest work, A Treatise on Operative Surgery, was published in 1844.
New elements of operative surgery by Alfred Velpeau (1851)
Grafts is the method when addressing PCL injuries that are in need of operative surgery.
In 1836 he became professor of operative surgery at Val-de-Grâce, followed by a professorship at Strasbourg five years later.
A Smith's Operative Surgery, too."
He became a demonstrator in anatomy and then, at the early age of twenty-six, he set up his own classes of systematic and operative surgery.
For Grades III and IV, operative surgery is recommended or is usually needed.
Dr. Rob was the editor, with Rodney Smith, of the eight-volume "Operative Surgery," which became a standard text for medical schools.
The anatomy of the arteries of the human body : and its application to pathology and operative surgery, with a series of lithographic drawings (1844)
In 1844, Joseph Pancoast listed the advantages of bloodletting in "A Treatise on Operative Surgery".
On the establishment of the École de Sante, he was named chair of operative surgery, but soon exchanged it for the chair of clinical surgery.
Stirling was appointed house surgeon at St George's Hospital, London, and eventually became assistant surgeon and lecturer on physiology and operative surgery.
In 1854 he translated from the French Charles Morel's Histology, and afterwards, Bernard and Huette's Operative Surgery.
In 1803 he was appointed assistant surgeon at the Hôtel-Dieu and in 1811 he became professor of operative surgery in succession to Raphael Bienvenu Sabatier.
In 1902, Darnall returned to Washington, D.C., and served as secretary of the faculty and instructor for sanitary chemistry and operative surgery at the Army Medical School.
They have been expanded to include cases in Internal Medicine, Obstretics, ECG reading and listening (with excellent quality heart sounds and murmers), Radiology, and Operative surgery.
He translated AALM Velpeau's Operative Surgery, and was foreign associate of the Imperial Academy of Medicine of Paris.
Contributor to Oxford handbook of clinical Surgery 3rd Edition (Best-selling surgical book) and Oxford handbook of operative Surgery 2nd Edition.