
|
Harold Ellis
Written in a lively and engaging style, by a medical author and teacher of great
renown, this book provides a fascinating and informative introduction to the
development of surgery through the ages. It illustrates some of the key advances
in surgery from primitive techniques such as trepanning, through some of the
gruesome but occasionally successful methods employed by the ancient
civilisations, the increasingly sophisticated techniques of the Greeks and
Romans, the advances of the Dark Ages and the Renaissance and on to the early
pioneers of anaesthesia and antisepsis such as Morton, Lister and Pasteur.
Heavily illustrated in colour, The Cambridge Illustrated History of Surgery is
the only serious choice for a reader wanting a lively and informative
single-volume introduction to surgical history. |
