GOWERS, Sir William Richard (1845 – 1915)
1845 – 1915
10 entries in the GMN corpus.
Image source Public domain
1873 CE–1875 CE
#5910
Atlas der pathologischen Anatomie des Augapfels. Atlas of the pathological anatomy of the eyeball
Text in German and English; Sir W. R. Gowers was responsible for the English translation. Digital facsimile from the Bayerische StaatsBibliothek at this link.
1876 CE
#4216
The state of the arteries in Bright’s disease.
Gowers’s important account of the changes in the retinal vessels in Bright’s disease is reproduced in Willius & Keys, Cardiac classics, 1941, pp. 605-11.
1879 CE
#878
An apparatus for the clinical estimation of haemoglobin.
Gowers introduced the colorimetric method of estimating hemoglobin and devised a hemoglobinometer for the purpose. This was modified by Haldane (see No. 891). Previously Hoppe-Seyler had used a hematinometer.
1880 CE
#4562
The diagnosis of diseases of the spinal cord.
Gowers demonstrated the dorsal spinocerebellar tract, “Gowers’s tract”, and introduced the terms myotatic and knee-jerk, which he elicited with the rubber edge of his stethoscope or a percussion hammer.
1881 CE
#4818
Epilepsy and other chronic convulsive diseases.
Gowers left a classic account of epilepsy, a book which today is still one of the most important on the subject. He was first to note the tetanic nature of the epileptic convulsion.
1885 CE
#4568
Lectures on the diagnosis of diseases of the brain.
1886 CE–1888 CE
#4569
A manual of diseases of the nervous system. 2 vols.
Gowers was physician and Professor of Clinical Medicine at University College, London. He especially distinguished himself in the field of neurology, and the above set is his greatest work.Page 365 of vol. 1 includes …
1888 CE
#4860
A case of tumour of the spinal cord. Removal; recovery.
Horsley was the founder of neurosurgery in England. The above paper records the first successful operation for the removal of an extramedullary tumor of the spinal cord.
1902 CE
#4762
On myopathy and a distal form.
“Distal myopathy of Gowers”, a form of progressive muscular dystrophy.
1907 CE
#4821