2018
DOI: 10.1055/a-0724-6264
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Prinzipien der Osteosynthese im Bereich des Gesichtsschädels

Abstract: ZusammenfassungWährend sich die Grundprinzipien der Osteosyntheseverfahren bei der Gesichtsschädelrekonstruktion in den letzten Jahren wenig verändert haben, fand durch Weiterentwicklung der Osteosynthesesysteme und Instrumente sowie durch die Implementierung der computerassistierten Chirurgie einschließlich der Verwendung anatomisch präformierter oder patientenspezifischer Implantate eine entscheidende Weiteren… Show more

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“…How gratefully they remembered his professional skill, always so generously given, and how, in the remote country districts, he would often cross moor and mountain at the summons of some poor sufferer, who believed with simple faith that the Doctor mor (the great Doctor as they called him) would certainly restore the blessed light of heaven to blind-struck eyes. 57 Wilde also showed real concern for the health of his medical colleagues, especially those working in the Poor Law Service. As editor of the Quarterly Journal, he highlighted the appallingly high mortality among dispensary doctors, who were contracted to give medical care to the poor, by publishing an article by the surgeon James Cusack (1778-1861) and the physician William Stokes.…”
Section: Humanitarianmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…How gratefully they remembered his professional skill, always so generously given, and how, in the remote country districts, he would often cross moor and mountain at the summons of some poor sufferer, who believed with simple faith that the Doctor mor (the great Doctor as they called him) would certainly restore the blessed light of heaven to blind-struck eyes. 57 Wilde also showed real concern for the health of his medical colleagues, especially those working in the Poor Law Service. As editor of the Quarterly Journal, he highlighted the appallingly high mortality among dispensary doctors, who were contracted to give medical care to the poor, by publishing an article by the surgeon James Cusack (1778-1861) and the physician William Stokes.…”
Section: Humanitarianmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…How gratefully they remembered his professional skill, always so generously given, and how, in the remote country districts, he would often cross moor and mountain at the summons of some poor sufferer, who believed with simple faith that the Doctor mor (the great Doctor as they called him) would certainly restore the blessed light of heaven to blind-struck eyes. 57 …”
Section: Humanitarianmentioning
confidence: 99%