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  1. Italy pivoted on the physician Antonio Vallisneri (1661-1730). A pupil of Marcello Malpighi’s and a professor of medicine at Padua University, in the first decades of the 18 th

  2. Antonio Vallisneri (3 May 1661 – 18 January 1730), also rendered as Antonio Vallisnieri, was an Italian medical scientist, physician and naturalist. Life [ edit ] Vallisneri was born in Trassilico , a small village in Garfagnana , and graduated in medicine in 1684, in Reggio Emilia , under the guidance of Marcello Malpighi .

  3. Antonio Vallisneri (May 3, 1661—January 18, 1730) on the Second Centenary of His Death “Maxima Parvo Tempore Molimur” ... Bethesda, MD 20894. Web Policies FOIA

    • Joseph Franchini
    • Ann Med Hist. 1931 Jan; 3(1): 58-68.
    • 1931
    • 1931/01
  4. Antonio Vallisneri (1661-1730) was a medical scientist, physician, and naturalist who held prestigious chairs of medicine at the University of Padua from 1700 to his death. His approach to science was greatly influenced by Leibniz, Conti, and Galileo’s experimental methodology.

  5. Quick Reference. (1661–1730) Italian physician and biologist. Born at Trassilico, near Modena in Italy, Vallisneri studied medicine at Bologna under Marcello Malpighi and at Reggio where he obtained his MD in 1684. After practicing medicine in Reggio, Vallisneri was appointed to the chair of medicine at the University of Padua in 1700 where ...

  6. See "Antonio Vallisneri" on page 58. Full text. Full text is available as a scanned copy of the original print version. ... Bethesda, MD 20894. Web Policies FOIA

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  8. Dec 1, 2008 · With this expressive description in 1721 Antonio Vallisneri, an Italian scientist, described for the first time the clinical and anatomo‐pathological features of polycystic ovarian syndrome (PCOS) [1]. Since then it has been one of the most widely discussed, controversial, and studied areas of endocrinological gynecology.

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