A brief history of breast cancer: Part II - Evolution of surgical pathology

Ritu Lakhtakia*, Roshan F. Chinoy

*المؤلف المقابل لهذا العمل

نتاج البحث: المساهمة في مجلةArticleمراجعة النظراء

4 اقتباسات (Scopus)

ملخص

The origins of pathology (Greek, pathologia = 'study of emotions or suffering') could perhaps date back to ancient physicians struggling through observations and philosophy to unravel the mysteries of the human body and its afflictions. While the recordings of the Egyptians (3,500-2,000 B.C.) revealed through the Edwin Smith Papyrus, the Mesopotamians (Code of Hammurabi, 2200 B.C.) and the Greek civilisation (Hippocrates 460-370 B.C.) attributed deformity and destruction to demonical, deitical or humoral influences, it was only during the golden Islamic age from the 8th century and the Renaissance period of European history that the earliest seeds of scientific pathological practice were sown. Surgery, until the last century the only modality to treat breast cancer, predated the evolution of 'surgical' pathology by millennia narrated in part I of this article. Technological advancement combined with insightful understanding of pathogenesis made pathology the focal point of oncological practice only in the 19th century. The science of breast cancer benefited from its emergence.

اللغة الأصليةEnglish
الصفحات (من إلى)e319-e322
دوريةSultan Qaboos University Medical Journal
مستوى الصوت14
رقم الإصدار3
حالة النشرPublished - أغسطس 2014

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