Группа авторов

Unveiling Diabetes - Historical Milestones in Diabetology


Скачать книгу

(the head) and ligated the ducts of the “pars superior” (the body and tail) of the dog’s pancreas (Fig. 10). He then described with great precision how, after the operation, the poor animal began to urinate abundantly, drink a lot, and waste away despite the large amount of food ingested. Unfortunately, focusing on his line of research, Brunner failed to relate the symptoms, which he attributed to generic postoperative disorders, to what was already widely known about diabetes. Upon dissection 7 months later, on May 12, 1686, he found the remaining pars superior atrophic (“indurata et grandinosa”).

Img

      References