Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. William George MacCallum (18 April 1874 – 3 February 1944) was a Canadian-American physician and pathologist. He was of Scottish descent and was born in Dunnville village in Canada, where his father was a physician. He was educated at the University of Toronto. He graduated with BA in 1894.

    • Canada
    • 3 February 1944 (aged 69), Florida, U.S.
    • Canadian
  2. Basado en los estudios de Gley, William George MacCallum (1874-1944), entonces jefe del departamento de patología del Hospital Johns Hopkins, describió que la tetania era directamente el resultado de la deficiencia de calcio, y por la misma época se demostró que la tetania por hipocalcemia podría ser tratada con inyecciones de extracto de ...

  3. 13 de dic. de 2007 · William George MacCallum, pathologist (b at Dunnville, Ont 18 April 1874; d at Baltimore, Md 3 Feb 1944). After graduating in 1894 from the University of Toronto, he entered Johns Hopkins Medical School and graduated with an MD in 1897. He took up the study of pathology after a year as intern.

  4. William George MacCallum. 1874-1944. MacCallum, a chairman of pathology at Johns Hopkins, was born in Dunnville, Ontario. He received a B.A. from the University of Toronto in 1894. Because of his extensive science coursework during undergraduate study, he was allowed to enter the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine as a second-year student.

  5. 11 de dic. de 2019 · William George MacCallum (1874–1944; Figure 4), professor of pathological physiology at Johns Hopkins University, building upon Opie's anatomic pathology studies, published a brilliant experimental study in 1909 linking the pancreatic islets more physiologically to DM. MacCallum was born on April 18, 1874 in Dunnville, Ontario, Canada.

    • James R Wright
    • 2020
  6. 12 de feb. de 2016 · Chapter 50. W.G. MacCallum (1874–1944) Tetany and the Parathyroid Gland. Book Author (s): D. Lynn Loriaux. First published: 12 February 2016. https://doi.org/10.1002/9781119205791.ch50. PDF. Tools. Share. Summary. W.G. MacCallum's interest in the parathyroid glands began about 1902.

  7. The William G. MacCallum Collection spans his entire career at Johns Hopkins. Series include correspondence, research and teaching notes, several manuscripts of his pathology textbook, autopsy reports, drafts of articles and talks, and honors and awards.