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  1. 23 de jul. de 2023 · Silas Weir Mitchel (1829-1914, Pensilvania, Estados Unidos), hijo de otro reputado médico, John Kearsley Mitchell, curtió sus conocimientos de medicina durante la Guerra Civil estadounidense.

  2. 8 de nov. de 2017 · One of these surgeons, Silas Weir Mitchell, was drawn to cases of nerve injury that his colleagues rejected as impossible to treat. When his specialty ward in Philadelphia filled up, the Army...

  3. Silas Weir Mitchell (February 15, 1829 – January 4, 1914) was an American physician, scientist, novelist, and poet. He is considered the father of medical neurology, and he discovered causalgia (complex regional pain syndrome) and erythromelalgia, and pioneered the rest cure . Early life.

  4. There he became impressed with the magnitude of the problem of peripheral nerve injuries. His friend and research collaborator William Hammond had resigned from the US Army in 1860 to take on the professorship of anatomy and physiology at the University of Maryland.

  5. El síndrome del miembro fantasma fue acuñado por primera vez por el médico estadounidense Silas Weir Mitchell en 1871. La sensación de "sentir" un miembro que no está ahí es una condición médica relativamente común. A veces el dolor está presente, que va de leve a grave y puede durar segundos, horas, días o más.

  6. 29 de ene. de 2017 · Dr. Silas Weir Mitchell used the opportunities presented by the Civil War to transform the treatment of nerve injuries in America.

  7. 1 de ene. de 2012 · Physician Silas Weir Mitchell is perhaps best remembered for his “Rest Cure” for nervous women, depicted by his onetime patient Charlotte Perkins Gilman in “The Yellow Wallpaper” (1892). In the harrowing tale, the narrator slowly goes mad while enduring Mitchell’s regimen of enforced bed rest, seclusion and overfeeding.