Literature DB >> 2203398

Samuel A Levine's first world war encounters with Mackenzie and Lewis.

C F Wooley1, J M Stang.   

Abstract

Samuel Albert Levine was a key figure in modern cardiology in the United States. During the first world war he was one of a select group of United States medical officers assigned to the British Military Heart Hospital where he encountered the "British medical giants"--Clifford Allbutt, William Osler, James Mackenzie, and Thomas Lewis. Levine's diary, written when he was a young medical officer during the first world war, presents crisp character sketches of James Mackenzie and Thomas Lewis. The autobiographical vignettes he wrote later in life were more gracious and polished retrospectives. The Levine perspectives, separated by a half century, contribute to our understanding of the developing fabric of Anglo-American cardiology.

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Year:  1990        PMID: 2203398      PMCID: PMC1024362          DOI: 10.1136/hrt.64.2.166

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Br Heart J        ISSN: 0007-0769


  10 in total

1.  Samuel A. Levine and his World War I encounters with the brothers Regii, Allbutt and Osler.

Authors:  C F Wooley; J M Stang
Journal:  Am J Cardiol       Date:  1990-03-01       Impact factor: 2.778

2.  Samuel A. Levine and his World War I experience.

Authors:  C F Wooley; J M Stang
Journal:  Am J Cardiol       Date:  1988-11-01       Impact factor: 2.778

3.  From irritable heart to mitral valve prolapse: World War I, the British experience and James Mackenzie.

Authors:  C F Wooley
Journal:  Am J Cardiol       Date:  1986-02-15       Impact factor: 2.778

4.  From irritable heart to mitral valve prolapse--World War I, the British experience and Thomas Lewis.

Authors:  C F Wooley
Journal:  Am J Cardiol       Date:  1986-10-01       Impact factor: 2.778

5.  From irritable heart to mitral valve prolapse--World War I, the British experience and Clifford Allbutt.

Authors:  C F Wooley
Journal:  Am J Cardiol       Date:  1987-02-01       Impact factor: 2.778

6.  From irritable heart to mitral valve prolapse: World War I. The U.S. experience and the origin of neurocirculatory asthenia.

Authors:  C F Wooley
Journal:  Am J Cardiol       Date:  1987-05-01       Impact factor: 2.778

7.  From irritable heart to mitral valve prolapse: the Osler connection.

Authors:  C F Wooley
Journal:  Am J Cardiol       Date:  1984-03-01       Impact factor: 2.778

8.  Sir Thomas Lewis: his impact on American cardiology.

Authors:  H Burchell
Journal:  Br Heart J       Date:  1981-07

9.  Moderns and ancients: the "new cardiology" in Britain 1880-1930.

Authors:  C Lawrence
Journal:  Med Hist Suppl       Date:  1985

10.  "Soldier's heart": the redefinition of heart disease and specialty formation in early twentieth-century Great Britain.

Authors:  J D Howell
Journal:  Med Hist Suppl       Date:  1985
  10 in total

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