Arab Medicine Important work in ophthalmology Early Arab (Islamic) medicine
Arab Medicine Important work in ophthalmology Early Arab (Islamic) medicine relies on the legacies left by Greek and Roman doctors, and has been heavily influenced by Galen and Hippocrates. Most of the medical literature in Greece and Rome was translated into Arabic, and then adapted to include their own conclusions and conclusions. Islamic scholars are experts in collecting and ordering data so that readers can understand them more easily and search through various texts. They have transformed many Greek and Roman writings into abstracts and encyclopedias.
From the year 600 to the year 700 AD, people generally believed that Allah would treat each disease. By 900 AD, Islamic medicine had become a science in its own right. As people were increasingly interested in health, Islamic doctors worked hard to find healing procedures that would analyze natural causes and possible treatments or treatments. The medieval Islamic world produced some of the greatest medical thinkers in history; they have also made advances in surgery, built hospitals and welcomed women into the medical profession.
Al-Razi Muhammad ibn Zakariyā Rāzī (865 — 925) was a Persian physician, chemist, alchemist, philosopher and scholar. He was the first to distinguish measles from smallpox and discovered kerosene, as well as various other compounds. He became chief medical officer of Baghdad and King hospitals.
Pediatrics is a separate field of medicine. He has also been an expert ophthalmologist, being at the forefront in the diagnosis and treatment of eye conditions. He was the first doctor to write about immunology and allergy, probably discovered allergic asthma and was the first to explain that fever is part of the body's defense against infection. He was a pharmacist and wrote extensively on the subject. Many artifacts are attributed to it, including spatulas, jars, mortars and blisters.
Ibn Sina Abū Alī al-ḥusayn ibn Abd Allāh ibn Sīnā (known as Ibn Sina or Avicenna, c980-1037) was a Persian polymath and prolific writer. 240 of his books and articles still exist today, 40 of which are devoted to medicine. Perhaps the best known is the Canon of Medicine of Avicena (photo) which consisted of five encyclopedic volumes. Originally written in Arabic, it was then translated into several languages, including Hebrew, English, French and German. It is considered one of the most famous and influential books in the history of medicine, and establishes the rules of modern medicine both in the Islamic world and in Europe. Women in Medicine
According to the writings of the “medicine of the prophet”, women can still treat women and women can treat men, even if it meant exposing the genitals of patients when circumstances made it necessary.
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The end of the line...
Finally, the Arab-built Islamic civilization has declined. The Mongols first devastated Baghdad (in 1258), then the Ottoman Turks conquered large parts of the Arab world and brought them to their new empire. As a result, the flow of medical ideas from the Islamic world has stopped, but fortunately, the legacy of Islamic medicine remains to this day.
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