by Saul Jarcho
Harvard University Press, 1980
Cloth: 978-0-674-15635-7
Library of Congress Classification RC682.C63
Dewey Decimal Classification 616.129009

ABOUT THIS BOOK
ABOUT THIS BOOK

The Concept of Heart Failure surveys the development of our ideas, both clinical and theoretical, on important aspects of cardiac and pulmonary disease, from the eleventh to the mid-eighteenth century. Before a unified and centralized concept of congestive heart failure was established, individual parts of the syndrome were regarded as discrete clinical entities. As a result, discussion of the syndrome is scattered throughout medieval and Renaissance literature.

Dr. Saul Jarcho, a noted clinician and medical historian, renders a great service in gathering together many little known sources and, with rich commentaries on each author, making them accessible to the modern reader. His translations of Latin, Arabic, and other texts are fluent and skillful. With its thorough documentation, concluding overview, and appendix on the relation between suffocative catarrh and pulmonary edema, The Concept of Heart Failure will be a rich resource for clinicians and historians alike.


See other books on: Avicenna | Cardiology | Concept | Early works to 1800 | Heart failure
See other titles from Harvard University Press