Iginio Tansini (1855–1943): An Italian surgeon and an innovator between the 19th and the 20th centuries

2020 ◽  
pp. 096777202090422
Author(s):  
Paolo Zampetti ◽  
Giuseppe Merlati ◽  
Michele A Riva

The aim of this paper is to describe the figure of the Italian surgeon Iginio Tansini (1855–1943), who was full professor of surgery and director of the Department of Surgery at the University of Pavia (1903–1931). In that period, he modernized the School of Surgery founded by Antonio Scarpa (1752–1832) in the previous century; he introduced the experimental method in the discipline. One of his major contributions was an innovative technique of mastectomy followed by plastic reconstruction with myocutaneous flap. Tansini was a pioneer in oncology, supporting the importance of an early diagnosis based on a biopsy; he was also the first in Italy to practice a gastrectomy for stomach cancer with success in 1887.

2005 ◽  
Vol 36 (1) ◽  
pp. 131-188 ◽  
Author(s):  
ANNETTE LYKKNES ◽  
LISE KVITTINGEN ◽  
ANNE KRISTINE BØØRRESEN

ABSTRACT Ellen Gleditsch (1879-1968) became Norway's first authority of radioactivity and the country's second female professor. After several years in international centers of radiochemistry, Gleditsch returned to Norway, becoming associate professor and later full professor of chemistry. Between 1916 and 1946 Gleditsch tried to establish a laboratory of radiochemistry at the University of Oslo, a career which included network building, grant applications, travels abroad, committee work, research, teaching, supervision, popularization, and war resistance work. Establishing a new field was demanding; only under her student, Alexis Pappas, was her field institutionalized at Oslo. This paper presents Gleditsch's everyday life at the Chemistry Department, with emphasis on her formation of a research and teaching laboratory of radiochemistry. Her main scientific work during this period is presented and discussed, including atomic weight determination of chlorine, age calculations in minerals, the hunt for actinium's ancestor and investigations on 40K.


PEDIATRICS ◽  
1958 ◽  
Vol 21 (6) ◽  
pp. 903-909
Author(s):  
James R. Lloyd ◽  
H. William Clatworthy

ALTHOUGH the association between hydramnios and congenital anomalies of the alimentary tract of the fetus has been recognized for more than 75 years, little emphasis has been placed upon this prenatal maternal abnormality as an aid to the earlier diagnosis of obstructive disease in the newborn. With the exception of isolated case reports which were summarized by Taussig in 1927 and the more recent observations of Mengert and Bourland, Castanier et al., and Clatworthy and Lloyd, the diagnostic significance of this relationship has not received proper recognition. Fortunately, today, the majority of anatomic abnormalities of the alimentary tract which are encountered in the neonate can be surgically corrected, if the diagnosis can be established and the treatment instituted before the infant has deteriorated irreversibly. A more general appreciation of the importance of hydramnios as a diagnostic sign of obstructive disease by physicians responsible for the care of the infant during the perinatal period should improve infant salvage. Recent surveys of our experience at the Columbus Children's Hospital with neonates having obstructing lesions of the esophagus or intestine attracted our attention to the fact that many of these infants were delivered of mothers who suffered from acute or chronic hydramnios. In an effort to determine the significance of the interrelationship between hydramnios in the mother and congenital obstruction of the alimentary tract in the fetus, a study was undertaken which included not only a survey of all infants admitted to the Children's Hospital with alimentary tract obstruction but also an analysis of a series of obstetric cases at the University Hospital in women with pregnancy complicated by hydramnios.


1988 ◽  
Vol 66 (12) ◽  
pp. 2603-2604
Author(s):  
Mohan K. Wali

The year 1985 was a landmark in Canadian biology, for it witnessed both the first Canadian Congress of Biology and the 80th birthday of Professor Vladimir Joseph Krajina. Because Krajina's work has had an impact on more than one biological discipline, we believed that the congress would be an appropriate forum to pay tribute to one of Canada's premier ecologists and botanists. Krajina has done much to awaken Canada's environmental consciousness and shape its ecological thinking and, in the process, has made major contributions to the international discipline of ecology.Professor Krajina was born in 1905 in Slavice, a small Moravian village in Czechoslovakia. Historians of science have characterized 1905 as “the miraculous year.” That was the year Albeit Einstein published the theory of relativity and George Santayana began his book The Life of Reason with the following first line printed in boldface, “Man affects his environment, sometimes to good purpose.” E. M. Forster published his Where Angels Fear to Tread, Vladimir Lenin his Two Tactics of Social Democracy in the Democratic Revolution, and Sigmund Freud his Three Contributions to the Theory of Sex. That year, the English novelist and science educator C. P. Snow was born, and the Canadian provinces of Alberta and Saskatchewan were formed.It was a very significant year for ecology as well. The first American textbook, Research Methods in Ecology, was published by a then little-known ecologist named Frederick E. Clements. Carl Raunkiaer in Denmark published his Types biologiques pour la géographie botanique, later to be cited in ecological literature as Raunkiaer's system of life forms and biological spectra. In addition, Karel Domin, who would become Krajina's mentor, published Das böhmische Mittelgebirge in Czechoslovakia.Krajina received his doctorate at the age of 22 from Charles University in Prague. There, he rose to become Professor of Botany and Head of the Department of Plant Sociology and Ecology. Krajina was a major force in the Second World War. A champion of democracy and possessing immense foresight and fortitude, he provided strategic information to the Allies, not without great personal hardship. This aspect of his life is beyond the scope of this review, but many volumes are available that document his indomitable courage and his contributions (see, for example, J. Korbel, The Communist Subversion of Czechoslovakia, Princeton University Press, Princeton, NJ, 1959). After the war, he received both military and civilian medals and was elected to the Czechoslovakian parliament.He arrived in Vancouver in 1949. Not in possession of his transcripts or even a reprint of his own work, he joined the University of British Columbia as Lady Davis Foundation Fellow and Special Lecturer, and later attained the rank of full professor. It was here that he developed the ecological schema that bear his imprint and guided 33 students through their doctoral and master's programs. Highly respected as a teacher and researcher, he has left an indelible mark on Canadian ecology. His contributions have been recognized by honorary degrees from major universities, by medals of honor from many societies, and in several feature films on environment from the National Film Board of Canada. Even today, he remains active in finalizing his massive treatise on the ecology of British Columbia vegetation.In presenting this series of papers as a tribute to Professor Krajina, it was the intention of the organizers to reflect on two contemporary topics of ecology, rather than present a comprehensive overview or a complete documentation of Krajina's contributions. What is presented here, therefore, is a series of ecological vignettes on community organization and ecosystem conservation, areas of science in which Professor Krajina has played a major role.The organizers extend their warm thanks to Professor Jennifer Shay of the University of Manitoba for her help and assistance, to Professor Jack Major for writing the epilogue, to Professor Taylor A. Steeves, who encouraged the publication of this symposium, and to Professor Paul F. Maycock, Associate Editor of the Canadian Journal of Botany, who edited this series of articles.


2020 ◽  
Vol 11 (3) ◽  
pp. 265-276
Author(s):  
Rafaela Alves Freitas ◽  
Eryc Abido Blumer ◽  
Laíse Oliveira Resende ◽  
Marcus Vinícius Arantes De Sousa

Este artigo trata de um relato de experiência de um projeto de extensão realizado por discentes e docentes da área da saúde da Universidade Federal do Triângulo Mineiro, com o objetivo de difundir informações a respeito da prevenção e diagnóstico precoce de diversos tipos de câncer. O projeto buscou alcançar um público de diversas faixas etárias, executando suas ações em uma escola infantil, em uma praça da cidade, e para pacientes que estivessem na sala de espera do ambulatório do Hospital das Clínicas da universidade. Fomentou-se o trabalho multidisciplinar no desenvolvimento das ações de prevenção e promoção à saúde, por meio de uma equipe de diversas áreas da saúde. Foram utilizados recursos didáticos e lúdicos adequados para as diferentes faixas etárias e níveis de escolaridade. A experiência contribuiu para a formação dos discentes da instituição de ensino, permitindo-lhes executar uma proposta de atuação integrada, interdisciplinar e intersetorial, em consonância com as prerrogativas do Sistema Único de Saúde, bem como contribuiu para promover a prevenção e diagnóstico precoce do câncer entre o público-alvo. Palavras-chave: Oncologia; Relações Comunidade-Instituição; Formação em Saúde University extension for the prevention and promotion of early cancer diagnosis in Minas Gerais   Abstract: This paper is an experience report of an extension project carried out by students and professors in the health area of a Brazilian university in Minas Gerais, to disseminate information about the prevention and early diagnosis of various types of cancer. The project aimed to reach an audience of different age groups, performing their activities in a primary school, in a city square, and patients who were waiting to be attended at the University Clinical Hospital. Multidisciplinary work was carried out to develop prevention and health-promoting activities through a team of different health-related courses. Didactic and ludic resources suitable for different age groups and educational levels were used. The experience contributed to the training of students at the educational institution, allowing them to carry out an integrated, interdisciplinary, and intersectoral action proposal, in line with the prerogatives of the Brazilian Unified Health System, as well as helping to promote the prevention and early diagnosis of cancer among the targeted audience. Keywords: Oncology; Community-Institutional Relations; Health Training


Author(s):  
Mark van Atten

L.E.J. Brouwer was a mathematician and philosopher. He graduated from the University of Amsterdam in 1907 and remained there, from 1913 to 1951, as full professor. Brouwer was a founding father of modern topology. In the foundations of mathematics he launched ‘intuitionism’: a mathematical ontology and epistemology, based on a philosophy of mind, that yields a form of constructive mathematics. Although intuitionism was designed as a Kantian approach, Brouwer’s conception of the intuition of time supports a much richer mathematics than Kant’s. Arguably, a closer affinity with Husserl’s transcendental phenomenology transpired as the latter was being developed. A by-product of intuitionism, intuitionistic logic, found application independently of the foundational programme. Intuitionism presented the first full-scale alternative to classical mathematics and logic. Brouwer was also interested in mysticism, and in language reform in the service of spiritual and political progress.


2011 ◽  
Vol 75 (5) ◽  
pp. 2677-2686 ◽  
Author(s):  
L. Bindi ◽  
C. Carbone ◽  
R. Cabella ◽  
G. Lucchetti

AbstractBassoite, ideally SrV3O7·4H2O, is a new mineral from the Molinello manganese mine, Val Graveglia. eastern Liguria, northern Apennines, Italy. It occurs as black euhedral to subhedral grains up to 400 urn across, closely associated with rhodonite, quartz and braunite. Bassoite is opaque with a sub-metallic lustre and a black streak. It is brittle and neither fracture nor cleavage was observed; the Vickers micro-hardness (VHN100) is 150 kg/mm (range 142—165; corresponding to a Mohs hardness of 4—41/2). The calculated density is 2.940 g/cm3 (on the basis of the empirical formula and X-ray single-crystal data). Bassoite is weakly bireflectant and very weakly pleochroic from grey to a dark green. Internal reflections are absent. The mineral is anisotropic, without characteristic rotation tints. Reflectance percentages (Rmin and Rmax) for the four standard COM wavelengths are 18.5%, 19.0% (471.1 nm); 17.2%, 17.8% (548.3 nm); 16.8%, 17.5% (586.6 nm) and 16.2%, 16.8% (652.3 nm), respectively.Bassoite is monoclinic, space group P21/m, with unit-cell parameters: a = 5.313(3) Å, b = 10.495(3) Å, c = 8.568(4) Å, β = 91.14(5)°, V= 477.7(4) Å3, a:b:c = 0.506:1:0.816, and Z = 2. The crystal structure was refined to R1 = 0.0209 for 1148 reflections with Fo > 4σ(Fo) and it consists of layers of VO5 pyramids (with vanadium in the tetravalent state) pointing up and down alternately with Sr between the layers (in nine-fold coordination). The nine most intense X-ray powder-diffraction lines [d in Å (I/I0) (hkt)] are: 8.5663 (100) (001); 6.6363 (14) (011); 3.4399 (14) (1̄21); 3.4049 (17) (121); 2.8339 (15) (1̄22); 2.7949 (11) (122); 2.6550 (15) (200); 2.6237 (11) (040) and 1.8666 (15) (240). Electron microprobe analyses produce a chemical formula (Sr0.97Ca0.02Na0.01)V3.00O74H20, on the basis of 2(Sr+Ca+Na) = 1, taking the results of the structure refinement into account. The presence of water molecules was confirmed by micro-Raman spectroscopy. The name honours Riccardo Basso (b. 1947), full professor of Mineralogy and Crystallography at the University of Genova. The new mineral and mineral name have been approved by the Commission on New Minerals, Nomenclature and Classification, IMA (2011-028).


Stresses ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 1 (1) ◽  
pp. 1-2
Author(s):  
Luigi Sanità di Toppi

A warm welcome from the Founder and Editor-in-Chief of Stresses, Luigi Sanità di Toppi, Full Professor of Botany at the University of Pisa, Italy [...]


1987 ◽  
Vol 96 (1) ◽  
pp. 26-28 ◽  
Author(s):  
David E. Ellison ◽  
Larry A. Hoover ◽  
Paul H. Ward

Myocutaneous flaps have become increasingly popular in reconstructive head and neck surgery. As surgeons have gained familiarity with them, many of the advantages, limitations, and complications of these flaps have become apparent. A rare but serious complication of myocutaneous flaps is recurrent tumor within the pedicle. Three cases of squamous cell carcinoma involving three different myocutaneous flaps are presented and the literature is reviewed. Possible mechanisms of tumor metastasis to myocutaneous flap pedicles are discussed. Surgeons must be aware of the possibility of tumor involvement of reconstructive flaps to facilitate early diagnosis and aggressive treatment.


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