Sunday, August 16, 2009

Osler Book Launch

Please Join Us at the

Book Launch for

Osler’s Bedside Library: Great Writers Who Inspired a Great Physician

Edited by Michael Lacombe and David Elpern

The Osler Library, McGill University

Montreal Quebec

Saturday Morning, October 24, 2009


The Osler Library is hosting a book signing for Osler’s Bedside Library (OBL) and would like to invite you to join us. There will be a few brief talks by some of the contributors and a light lunch will be served. A dinner for interested attendees will be organised as well.

Dave Elpern, who worked with Michael Lacombe on this volume, is one of the founders of Dermanities. We hope to have some dermatologists at this event.

Sir William Osler advised physicians to “let no day pass without contact with the best literature of the world. Before going to sleep,” he counseled, “read for half an hour” from a Bedside Library, beginning with ”a list of ten books with which you may make close friends.”

OBL is a companion and guide for contemporary readers. It features selections from Osler’s Canon, plus 20 more works that Osler frequently referred to. Each chapter contains selections from the classics plus commentary by a leading scholar in the medical humanities. Special reference is made to why the work is relevant to a physician’s education and practice.

If interested, please contact Chris Lyons, Assistant Librarian at the Osler Library or Dave Elpern for more information.


Wednesday, June 10, 2009

Dermatologist's Geko



Rob Norman is a dermatologist in Tampa, Florida.
He "caught" a geko feasting on a dragonfly in his garden this morning.

We await his haiku on this moment.


Wednesday, May 27, 2009

Origins of Leprosy

"The oldest known skeleton showing signs of leprosy has been found in India and may help solve the puzzle of where the disease originated. The skeleton, about 4,000 years old, was found at the site of Balathal, near Udaipur in northwestern India. Historians have long considered the Indian subcontinent to be the source of the leprosy that was first reported in Europe in the fourth century B.C., shortly after the armies of Alexander the Great returned from India." From the NY Times, May 27, 2009

Traditionally, leprologists are dermatologists. The disorder is endlessly challenging and is of great intellectual interest. These new findings are of import to historians and students of medicine.

You can Read the NY Times article Here
and/or the PLoS One report Here
PLoS Abstract: Results indicate that lepromatous leprosy was present in India by 2000 B.C. This evidence represents the oldest documented skeletal evidence for the disease. Our results indicate that Vedic burial traditions in cases of leprosy were present in northwest India prior to the first millennium B.C. Our results also support translations of early Vedic scriptures as the first textual reference to leprosy. The presence of leprosy in skeletal material dated to the post-urban phase of the Indus Age suggests that if M. leprae evolved in Africa, the disease migrated to India before the Late Holocene, possibly during the third millennium B.C. at a time when there was substantial interaction among the Indus Civilization, Mesopotamia, and Egypt. This evidence should be impetus to look for additional skeletal and molecular evidence of leprosy in India and Africa to confirm the African origin of the disease.

We'd love to hear your take on this.

The mandible pictured above demonstrates root exposure, alveolar resorption, antemortem tooth loss, and a small apical abscess at the left third premolar. Image is from PLoS One article.

Sunday, May 24, 2009

Who Was Turkan Saydal?

Dermatologist, Turkan Saydal died on Monday, May 18, 2005, age 73. "One of the first women to work as a dermatologist in Turkey, Dr. Saylan became active in the fight against leprosy in the 1970s, founding the Turkish Leprosy Relief Association. Later, she was a consultant to the World Health Organization on leprosy and a founding member of the International Leprosy Union." NY Times

Her obituary appeared in the NY Times this week. "Far from the madding crowd's ignoble strife/ [her] sober wishes never learned to stray." It makes us proud to have had her in our midst. It makes us sad that we did not know about her and her work.

Perhaps, a Turkish colleague can add a few words.

Sunday, April 5, 2009

Blogger Guide

Check out this SlideShare Presentation:

Saturday, February 28, 2009