LEADER 00000cam 2200541K 4500 001 ocn655459452 003 OCoLC 005 20170815114040.0 006 m o d 007 cr un||||a|a|| 008 100812s1948 mdua ob 000 0 eng d 019 298074178|a598598587|a987728947|a988779905 035 (OCoLC)655459452|z(OCoLC)298074178|z(OCoLC)598598587 |z(OCoLC)987728947|z(OCoLC)988779905 040 OCLCE|beng|epn|cOCLCE|dRRP|dOCLCQ|dVLB|dVRC|dOCLCO|dOCLCQ |dOCLCF|dOCLCO|dOCLCQ|dCOCUF|dSTJ 042 dlr 049 STJJ 050 4 QM451|b.S8 1948 060 4 WL 101|bS923h 1948 082 04 611.8 099 WORLD WIDE WEB|aE-BOOK|aEBSCO 100 1 Strong, Oliver Smith,|d1864-1951. 245 10 Human neuroanatomy /|cby Oliver S. Strong and Adolph Elwyn. 250 2d ed. 264 1 Baltimore :|bWilliams & Wilkins,|c1948. 300 1 online resource (x, 442 pages) :|billustrations 336 text|btxt|2rdacontent 337 computer|bc|2rdamedia 338 online resource|bcr|2rdacarrier 504 Includes bibliographical references (pages 409-420). 506 |3Use copy|fRestrictions unspecified|2star|5MiAaHDL 520 "Neurology, more perhaps than any other branch of medicine, is dependent on an accurate knowledge of anatomy as a basis for the intelligent diagnosis and localization of neural disturbances. This book, the result of many years of neuroanatomical teaching, is intended to supply this basic anatomical need, to give the student and physician a thorough and clear presentation of the structural mechanisms of the human nervous system together with some understanding of their functional and clinical significance. It is an attempt to link structure and function into a dynamic pattern without sacrificing anatomical detail. The book is a human neuroanatomy sufficiently rich in content to obviate the necessity of constantly consulting larger anatomical texts. It may be conveniently divided into two parts. The first part (Chapters I-VIII) is concerned with the general organization and meaning of the nervous system, its embryology and histological structure, and with some fundamental neurological problems as they apply to man. This is followed by a discussion of the organization and segmental distribution of the peripheral nerve elements, including an analysis of the functional components of the spinal nerves and of the various receptors and effectors. 520 If these earlier chapters are perhaps more extensive than in most other texts, it is due to the conviction that the book should be complete in itself, and also that a knowledge of these preliminaries is essential for an understanding of the complex machinery of the spinal cord and brain. The second and larger part (Chapter IX-XX) is devoted to the architectonics of the central nervous system and may be regarded as "applied neuroanatomy." Special features of this part are the many fine photographs, both gross and microscopic, of the human brain and spinal cord, the great wealth of anatomical detail, and the discussion of the structural mechanisms in the light of clinical experience. While the individual portions of the nervous system are treated separately, an attempt has been made to achieve organic structural continuity by judicious repetition and overlapping and by constant reference to related topics already familiar to the student from previous chapters. The plan of exposition is substantially the same for each topic. The gross structure and relationships are concisely but thoroughly reviewed with the aid of clear and graphic illustrations. The internal structure is then presented in detail, usually based on a carefully graded series of fine and clearly labeled microphotographs of human material. At each level the student is familiarized with the exact location, extent and relationships of the various structures seen in the section. Finally the anatomical features of each part are reviewed more comprehensively as three-dimensional structural mechanisms, with a full discussion of their connections and clinical significance. We believe that this treatment will make the complicated structural details alive and interesting to the student. The illustrations are not segregated in the back of the book in the form of an atlas but are scattered in the text, in proper relation to the levels studied"--Preface. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2010 APA, all rights reserved). 533 Electronic reproduction.|b[S.l.] :|cHathiTrust Digital Library,|d2010.|5MiAaHDL 538 Master and use copy. Digital master created according to Benchmark for Faithful Digital Reproductions of Monographs and Serials, Version 1. Digital Library Federation, December 2002.|uhttp://purl.oclc.org/DLF/benchrepro0212 |5MiAaHDL 583 1 digitized|c2010|hHathiTrust Digital Library|lcommitted to preserve|2pda|5MiAaHDL 588 0 Print version record. 650 0 Nervous system. 650 2 Nervous System. 650 7 Nervous system.|2fast|0(OCoLC)fst01036080 700 1 Elwyn, Adolph,|d1888-1955. 710 2 National Institute on Drug Abuse,|edonor.|5DNLM 710 2 Addiction Research Center (U.S.),|eformer owner.|5DNLM 710 2 Public Health Service Hospital (Lexington, Ky.),|eformer owner.|5DNLM 776 08 |iPrint version:|aStrong, Oliver S. (Oliver Smith), 1864- 1951.|tHuman neuroanatomy.|b2d ed.|dBaltimore, Williams & Wilkins, 1948|w(DLC) 48002827|w(OCoLC)1557349 994 C0|bSTJ
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