Javascript must be enabled to continue!
Andreas Vesalius’ 500th anniversary: the initiation of hand and forearm myology
View through CrossRef
Andreas Vesalius (1515–1564) was the first to market an illustrated text on the freshly dissected muscular anatomy of the human hand and forearm when he published his De Fabrica Corporis Humani Libri Septem, in 1543. To commemorate his 500th birthday, we searched the second of seven books composing De Fabrica, the annotated woodcut illustrations of De Fabrica, the Tabulae Sex, and Epitome, and an eyewitness report of a public dissection by Vesalius for references to the morphology and functions of these muscles. We found Vesalius to have recognized all currently distinguished muscles except the palmaris brevis and he noted occasional absence of some muscles. Generally, he limited the origin and insertion to bones, largely disregarding attachments to membranes and fascia. Functionally, he recorded the muscles as having a single vector and operating on only one joint. We conclude that Vesalius was nearly completely correct about the anatomy of the muscles of the forearm, but much less accurate about their function. Level of Evidence: 5
Title: Andreas Vesalius’ 500th anniversary: the initiation of hand and forearm myology
Description:
Andreas Vesalius (1515–1564) was the first to market an illustrated text on the freshly dissected muscular anatomy of the human hand and forearm when he published his De Fabrica Corporis Humani Libri Septem, in 1543.
To commemorate his 500th birthday, we searched the second of seven books composing De Fabrica, the annotated woodcut illustrations of De Fabrica, the Tabulae Sex, and Epitome, and an eyewitness report of a public dissection by Vesalius for references to the morphology and functions of these muscles.
We found Vesalius to have recognized all currently distinguished muscles except the palmaris brevis and he noted occasional absence of some muscles.
Generally, he limited the origin and insertion to bones, largely disregarding attachments to membranes and fascia.
Functionally, he recorded the muscles as having a single vector and operating on only one joint.
We conclude that Vesalius was nearly completely correct about the anatomy of the muscles of the forearm, but much less accurate about their function.
Level of Evidence: 5.
Related Results
Rhazes in the Renaissance of Andreas Vesalius
Rhazes in the Renaissance of Andreas Vesalius
AbstractAndreas Vesalius' (1514–64) first publication was a Paraphrasis of the ninth book of the Liber ad Almansorem, written by the Arab–Persian physician and alchemist Rhazes (85...
Andreas Vesalius’ 500th Anniversary: First Description of the Mammary Suspensory Ligaments
Andreas Vesalius’ 500th Anniversary: First Description of the Mammary Suspensory Ligaments
AbstractSir Astley Paston Cooper has, to date, been acknowledged to be the first to describe the suspensory ligaments of the breast, or Cooper’s ligaments, in 1840. We found these ...
Single‐Molecule Optical Replication Mapping (ORM) Suggests Human Replication Timing is Regulated by Stochastic Initiation
Single‐Molecule Optical Replication Mapping (ORM) Suggests Human Replication Timing is Regulated by Stochastic Initiation
DNA replication timing is regulated by the timing of initiation across the genome. However, there is no consensus as to how initiation timing is regulated. Deterministic models con...
Minimally Invasive Plate Osteosynthesis of Comminuted One Bone Fractures of Forearm Shaft
Minimally Invasive Plate Osteosynthesis of Comminuted One Bone Fractures of Forearm Shaft
Objective: Due to rotatability of the forearm, open reduction and internal fixation with plate is a gold standard treatment of forearm fracture. Our hypothesis was that if it does ...
Evidence for cholinergically mediated vasodilation at the beginning of isometric exercise in humans.
Evidence for cholinergically mediated vasodilation at the beginning of isometric exercise in humans.
Vasodilation occurs in the nonexercising forearm at the beginning of isometric handgrip despite activation of sympathetic vasoconstrictor reflexes. The mechanism of this response r...
Smooth Muscle-Derived Nitric Oxide is Elevated in Isolated Forearm Veins in Human Alcoholic Cirrhosis
Smooth Muscle-Derived Nitric Oxide is Elevated in Isolated Forearm Veins in Human Alcoholic Cirrhosis
1. Cirrhosis is often complicated by disturbances in the systemic circulation. We have previously demonstrated decreased vascular responses to vasoconstrictors in forearm resistanc...
Centennial ties: Harvey Cushing (1869–1939) and William Osler (1849–1919) on Andreas Vesalius (1514–1564)
Centennial ties: Harvey Cushing (1869–1939) and William Osler (1849–1919) on Andreas Vesalius (1514–1564)
Andreas Vesalius is often regarded as the founding father of modern anatomical study. The quincentennial anniversary of his birth – 31 December 2014 – has been very widely commemor...
De Russische vertalingen van Andreas Vesalius' (1514-1564) anatomische werken
De Russische vertalingen van Andreas Vesalius' (1514-1564) anatomische werken
History of the translation of Andreas Vesalius’s anatomical works into RussianAn important contribution to the scientific reform of medicine in Russia in the seventeenth century wa...

