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- Alfredo de Micheli-Serra.
- Instituto Nacional de Cardiología Ignacio Chávez, Departamento de Farmacología, Juan Badiano No. 1, Col. Sección XVI, C.P. 14080, México, D. F.
- Gac Med Mex. 2002 May 1; 138 (3): 281-5.
AbstractArab medicine arose as a consequence of the assimilation and breeding of Hellenistic medicine, particularly of Galenic medicine. It reached its high point between the X and XII centuries and, after the XIII century, lost all creative capabilities. Nevertheless, it achieved the status of being an incentive for European medieval medicine. Some aspects of the medical teaching and publications of the most distinguished Moslem physicians, such as Rhazes (865-932), Avicenna (980-1037), and Averroës (1126-1198) are described. The main characteristics of Moslem medical institutions such as guilds, hospitals, and organizations of professional practice also are discussed. Although Arab medicine essentially constituted a transmission vehicle of master ideas of ancient medical thought, this medicine awoke the interest and initiative of the medieval physicians of western Europe, for example, those at the medical school of Salerno.
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