Topographical Atlas of the Spinal Cord

   |   Alexander BRUCE

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Topographical Atlas of the Spinal Cord
Topographical Atlas of the Spinal Cord
Topographical Atlas of the Spinal Cord
Topographical Atlas of the Spinal Cord

BRUCE'S TOPOGRAPHICAL ATLAS OF THE SPINAL CORD, 1901, WITH 32 PLATES

BRUCE, Alexander. A Topographical Atlas of the Spinal Cord. London, Edinburgh, and Oxford: Williams & Norgate, 1901. Small folio,original half russet morocco gilt, top edge gilt.

First edition, with 65 photogravures on 32 plates, depicting stained sections of nerve cells and segments of tissue.

"A Spinal Cord from an adult who was free from any sign, symptom, or post-mortem evidence of any disease of the nervous system has been selected. It has been fixed and hardened by a process which allowed the nerve cells and the myelin of the nerve fibers to be equally well stained in separate sections. The Cord has then been divided into its various segments, and each segment cut throughout its entire length into serial microscopic sections of uniform thickness. Two series of sections were prepared; the one (Series A) to demonstrate the arrangement of the nerve cells, and the other (Series B) the shape of the grey matter characteristic of each segment" (Preface). Scottish neurologist Bruce studied in Edinburgh, Vienna, Heidelburg, and Paris, becoming the Lecturer on Neurology and Practice of Medicine at Surgeons' Hall, Edinburgh. "Bruce's tract," the septo-marginal tract, part of the descending posteromedial tract of the spinal cord, was named for him (Dobson, Anatomical Eponyms, 37). Bookplate and owner signature. Discrete ink call number to the inner top margin of title page.

Occasional scattered light foxing to interior. Light rubbing to extremities and light soiling to rear board. A near-fine copy. Scarce.

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