Eye Neoplasm

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Asghar Montazerolghaem - One of the best experts on this subject based on the ideXlab platform.

  • an analytical investigation of causes and methods of Eye Neoplasm treatment in islamic civilization
    Journal of Research on History of Medicine, 2019
    Co-Authors: Zahra Hossein Hashemi, Masood Kasiri, Asghar Montazerolghaem
    Abstract:

    Eye and its treatments and surgeries used to be taken as a profession in old Islamic civilization and ophthalmology, just as surgery, used to be a completely independent branch of medicine. A glance on numerous works authored about the Eye and its treatments during Islamic time illustrates the fact that Islamic physicians knew most of Eye diseases, and have  posed some theories about the Eye and its diseases in theirs books. The present study tries to scrutinize on Muslim physicians ideas about Eye Neoplasm and its causes and treatment and to compare them with modern medicine. This is a descriptive-analytic library study and attempts to illuminate opinions of Muslim physicians about Eye Neoplasm and their suggested treatments. The results showed theories of Eye Neoplasm posed by Muslims and also their suggested treatments were of totally scientific bases and accord modern medicine sources and methods.

Zahra Hossein Hashemi - One of the best experts on this subject based on the ideXlab platform.

  • an analytical investigation of causes and methods of Eye Neoplasm treatment in islamic civilization
    Journal of Research on History of Medicine, 2019
    Co-Authors: Zahra Hossein Hashemi, Masood Kasiri, Asghar Montazerolghaem
    Abstract:

    Eye and its treatments and surgeries used to be taken as a profession in old Islamic civilization and ophthalmology, just as surgery, used to be a completely independent branch of medicine. A glance on numerous works authored about the Eye and its treatments during Islamic time illustrates the fact that Islamic physicians knew most of Eye diseases, and have  posed some theories about the Eye and its diseases in theirs books. The present study tries to scrutinize on Muslim physicians ideas about Eye Neoplasm and its causes and treatment and to compare them with modern medicine. This is a descriptive-analytic library study and attempts to illuminate opinions of Muslim physicians about Eye Neoplasm and their suggested treatments. The results showed theories of Eye Neoplasm posed by Muslims and also their suggested treatments were of totally scientific bases and accord modern medicine sources and methods.

Masood Kasiri - One of the best experts on this subject based on the ideXlab platform.

  • an analytical investigation of causes and methods of Eye Neoplasm treatment in islamic civilization
    Journal of Research on History of Medicine, 2019
    Co-Authors: Zahra Hossein Hashemi, Masood Kasiri, Asghar Montazerolghaem
    Abstract:

    Eye and its treatments and surgeries used to be taken as a profession in old Islamic civilization and ophthalmology, just as surgery, used to be a completely independent branch of medicine. A glance on numerous works authored about the Eye and its treatments during Islamic time illustrates the fact that Islamic physicians knew most of Eye diseases, and have  posed some theories about the Eye and its diseases in theirs books. The present study tries to scrutinize on Muslim physicians ideas about Eye Neoplasm and its causes and treatment and to compare them with modern medicine. This is a descriptive-analytic library study and attempts to illuminate opinions of Muslim physicians about Eye Neoplasm and their suggested treatments. The results showed theories of Eye Neoplasm posed by Muslims and also their suggested treatments were of totally scientific bases and accord modern medicine sources and methods.

Frédéric Mouriaux - One of the best experts on this subject based on the ideXlab platform.

  • Eye Neoplasms Research: A Bibliometric Analysis from 1966 to 2012:
    European Journal of Ophthalmology, 2015
    Co-Authors: Christophe Boudry, Frédéric Mouriaux
    Abstract:

    PURPOSE: To calculate the growth rate of the biomedical literature on Eye Neoplasms and to assess which journals, countries, and continents are the most productive. METHODS: PubMed was used to search for articles published from 1966 to 2012. Total number of articles per year was fitted to a linear equation as well as an exponential curve. To identify the core journals and predict the number of journals containing articles related to Eye Neoplasms, Bradford's law was applied. For each country and each continent, the gross domestic product (GDP) index (publications per $1 billion USD of GDP) and the population index (publications per million inhabitants) were calculated. RESULTS: A total of 27,943 references were retrieved. The growth in the number of publications showed a linear increase with a yearly average growth rate of 2.08%, which was lower than for the whole PubMed database (3.59%). Using Bradford's law, 17 core journals were identified, among which 2 journals produced more than 1000 articles (JAMA Ophthalmology and American Journal of Ophthalmology). Europe was the most productive continent, followed by North America and Asia. The United States was by far the predominant country in number of publications, followed by Germany and the United Kingdom. However, population and GDP indexes showed that absolute production did not reflect the production per capita or economic efficiency. CONCLUSIONS: This bibliometric study provides data contributing to a better understanding of the Eye Neoplasm research field.

Christophe Boudry - One of the best experts on this subject based on the ideXlab platform.

  • Eye Neoplasms Research: A Bibliometric Analysis from 1966 to 2012:
    European Journal of Ophthalmology, 2015
    Co-Authors: Christophe Boudry, Frédéric Mouriaux
    Abstract:

    PURPOSE: To calculate the growth rate of the biomedical literature on Eye Neoplasms and to assess which journals, countries, and continents are the most productive. METHODS: PubMed was used to search for articles published from 1966 to 2012. Total number of articles per year was fitted to a linear equation as well as an exponential curve. To identify the core journals and predict the number of journals containing articles related to Eye Neoplasms, Bradford's law was applied. For each country and each continent, the gross domestic product (GDP) index (publications per $1 billion USD of GDP) and the population index (publications per million inhabitants) were calculated. RESULTS: A total of 27,943 references were retrieved. The growth in the number of publications showed a linear increase with a yearly average growth rate of 2.08%, which was lower than for the whole PubMed database (3.59%). Using Bradford's law, 17 core journals were identified, among which 2 journals produced more than 1000 articles (JAMA Ophthalmology and American Journal of Ophthalmology). Europe was the most productive continent, followed by North America and Asia. The United States was by far the predominant country in number of publications, followed by Germany and the United Kingdom. However, population and GDP indexes showed that absolute production did not reflect the production per capita or economic efficiency. CONCLUSIONS: This bibliometric study provides data contributing to a better understanding of the Eye Neoplasm research field.