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1 Fellow of the Royal College of Surgeons
English-german dictionary > Fellow of the Royal College of Surgeons
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2 Fellow of the Royal College of Surgeons
Общая лексика: член Королевского хирургического колледжа (Великобритания)Универсальный англо-русский словарь > Fellow of the Royal College of Surgeons
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3 FRCS-fellow of the royal college of surgeons of england
Лазерная медицина: член королевского колледжа хирургии великобританииУниверсальный англо-русский словарь > FRCS-fellow of the royal college of surgeons of england
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4 FRCSPlast-specialist fellow of the Royal College of Surgeons in England
Универсальный англо-русский словарь > FRCSPlast-specialist fellow of the Royal College of Surgeons in England
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5 Fellow of the Royal College of Veterinary Surgeons
English-german dictionary > Fellow of the Royal College of Veterinary Surgeons
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6 Fellow of the Royal College of Veterinary Surgeons
Общая лексика: член Королевского колледжа ветеринарных хирургов (Великобритания)Универсальный англо-русский словарь > Fellow of the Royal College of Veterinary Surgeons
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7 fellow
fellow ['feləʊ]1 noun∎ a good fellow un type ou gars bien;∎ an old fellow un vieux bonhomme;∎ poor old fellow pauvre vieux;∎ the poor fellow's just lost his job le pauvre vient juste de perdre son travail;∎ the poor little fellow (animal) la pauvre bête;∎ hello, old fellow salut, mon vieux;∎ my dear fellow mon cher ami;∎ give a fellow a chance! donne-moi une chance!(b) literary (comrade) ami(e) m,f, camarade mf; (other human being) semblable mf; (person in same profession) confrère m, consœur f;∎ fellows in misfortune compagnons (compagnes) mpl, fpl d'infortune;∎ school fellow camarade mf d'école(c) University (professor) professeur m (faisant également partie du conseil d'administration); (postgraduate student) étudiant(e) m,f de troisième cycle (souvent chargé de cours)(d) (of learned society) membre m;∎ Fellow of the Craft (in freemasonry) compagnon m;∎ British Fellow of the Royal College of Music = membre du "Royal College of Music";∎ Fellow of the Royal College of Physicians = membre du "Royal College of Physicians";∎ Fellow of the Royal College of Surgeons = membre du "Royal College of Surgeons";∎ Fellow of the Royal College of Veterinary Surgeons = membre du "Royal College of Veterinary Surgeons";∎ Fellow of the Royal Society = membre de la Société royale (de Londres)∎ where is the fellow to this sock/glove? où est la chaussette/le gant qui va avec celle-là/celui-là?∎ fellow prisoner/student camarade mf de prison/d'études;∎ fellow passenger/sufferer/soldier compagnon m de voyage/d'infortune/d'armes;∎ fellow being or creature semblable mf, pareil(eille) m,f;∎ one's fellow man son semblable;∎ fellow worker (in office) collègue mf (de travail); (in factory) camarade mf (de travail), compagnon m de travail;∎ fellow citizen concitoyen(enne) m,f;∎ fellow countryman/countrywoman compatriote mf;∎ it's rare to meet a fellow hang-glider c'est rare de rencontrer un autre adepte du deltaplane;∎ an opportunity to meet your fellow translators une occasion de rencontrer vos confrères traducteurs►► fellow feeling sympathie f;fellow traveller (companion on journey) compagnon (compagne) m,f de voyage ou de route; figurative compagnon m de route; Politics communisant(e) m,f -
8 Lister, Joseph, Baron Lister
SUBJECT AREA: Medical technology[br]b. 5 April 1827 Upton, Essex, Englandd. 10 February 1912 Walmer, Kent, England[br]English surgeon, founder of the antiseptic and aseptic principles of surgical practice.[br]Of Quaker stock, his father also being a Fellow of the Royal Society, he studied medicine at University College, London. He qualified, and became a Fellow of the Royal College of Surgeons, in 1852. Wishing to pursue a surgical career, he moved to Edinburgh to study surgery under William Syme, whose daughter he married in 1852, the same year he was appointed Assistant Surgeon to the Edinburgh Royal Infirmary.Until his appointment as Regius Professor of Surgery at Glasgow University and Glasgow Royal Infirmary in 1861, he was engaged in a wide variety of investigations into the nature of inflammation and the effects of irritants on wounds. Following his move to Glasgow, he became particularly involved in the major problems arising out of the vast increase in the number of surgical procedures brought about by the recent introduction of general anaesthesia. By 1865 his continuing study of wound inflammation and the microbial studies of Pasteur had led him to institute in the operating theatre a regime of surgical antisepsis involving the use of a carbolic acid spray coupled with the sterilization of instruments, the site of operation and the hands of the operator. Increasingly it was appreciated that the air was the least important origin of infection, and by 1887 the antiseptic approach had been superseded by the aseptic.In 1869 he succeeded Syme in the Chair at Edinburgh and his methods were widely accepted abroad. In 1877 he moved to the Chair of Surgery at King's College Hospital, London, in the hope of encouraging acceptance of his work in the metropolis. As well as developing a variety of new surgical procedures, he was engaged for many years in the development of surgical ligatures, which had always been a potent stimulant of infection. His choice of catgut as a sterilizable, absorbable material paved the way for major developments in this field. The Lister Institute of Preventive Medicine was named in his honour in 1903.[br]Principal Honours and DistinctionsCreated Baronet 1883. Baron 1897. Order of Merit 1902. President, Royal Society 1895– 1900.Bibliography1870, "On the effects of the antiseptic system of treatment upon the salubrity of a surgical hospital", Lancet.1859, Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society.1863, Croonian Lecture.1881, 1900, Transactions of the International Medical Congress.Further ReadingR.J.Godlee, 1924, Lord Lister.1927, Lister Centenary Handbook, London: Wellcome Historical Medical Museum. H.C.Cameron, 1948, Joseph Lister, the Friend of Man.MGBiographical history of technology > Lister, Joseph, Baron Lister
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9 Charnley, John
SUBJECT AREA: Medical technology[br]b. 29 August 1911 Bury, Lancashire, Englandd. 5 August 1982 Lancashire, England[br]English orthopedic surgeon, pioneer of ultra-clean-air operating-theatre environments and of total hip-joint replacement.[br]During his medical training at Manchester he qualified for the Fellowship of the Royal College of Surgeons and obtained his FRCS in 1936, within a year of becoming medically qualified. Following military service as an orthopaedic specialist, he was appointed a consultant at the Manchester Royal Infirmary in 1947.Charnley investigated the problems of joint lubrication using polytetrafluoroethylene (PTFE) and a series of 300 initially successful cases laid the foundation for further developments, involving total hip-joint replacement, when in 1962 high-density polythene became available as a suitable inert material. The need for a totally sterile operating environment in which to carry out such procedures led him to develop ultra-clean-air operating-theatre modules which proved to have wide application in relation to other surgical disciplines and to the problems of hospital building. To further these principles he resigned from the Royal Infirmary and was the guiding spirit in the establishment of the centre for hip surgery at Wrightington Hospital in Lancashire, which gained wide international recognition.[br]Principal Honours and DistinctionsKnighted 1977. FRS 1964. Fellow of the Royal College of Surgeons. British Medical Association Gold Medal 1978.Bibliography1961, "Arthroplasty of the hip", Lancet.1974, Wound Infection after Hip Replacement Performed in a Clean-Air Operating Room, Wrightington.1970, Acrylic Cement in Orthopaedic Surgery, Baltimore.MG -
10 FRCS
tr['ef'ɑː'siː'es]1 SMALLBRITISH ENGLISH/SMALL ( Fellow of the Royal College of Surgeons) miembro del colegio oficial de cirujanosN ABBR(Brit) = Fellow of the Royal College of Surgeons -
11 FRCS
FRCS [‚efɑ:‚si:'es]British ( abbreviation Fellow of the Royal College of Surgeons) = membre du "Royal College of Surgeons" -
12 FRCS
2) Сокращение: Federal Reserve Communications System (for funds transfer), Fellow of the Royal College of Surgeons -
13 FRCS
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14 FRCS
forkortelse for Fellow of the Royal College of Surgeons -
15 FRCS n abbr Brit
[ˌɛfɒːsiː'ɛs](= Fellow of the Royal College of Surgeons) -
16 FRCS
( BRIT) n abbr= Fellow of the Royal College of Surgeons -
17 FRCVS
FRCVS [‚efɑ:‚si:vi:'es]British ( abbreviation Fellow of the Royal College of Veterinary Surgeons) = membre du "Royal College of Veterinary Surgeons" -
18 Cruickshank, William
SUBJECT AREA: Electricity[br]d. 1810/11 Scotland[br]Scottish chemist and surgeon, inventor of a trough battery developed from Volta's pile.[br]Cruickshank graduated MA from King's College, Aberdeen, in 1765, and later gained a Diploma of the Royal College of Surgeons. When chemistry was introduced in 1788 into the course at the Royal Military Academy in Woolwich, Cruickshank became a member of staff, serving as Assistant to Dr A.Crawford, the Lecturer in Chemistry. Upon Crawford's death in 1796 Cruickshank succeeded him as Lecturer and held the post until his retirement due to ill health in 1804. He also held the senior posts of Chemist to the Ordnance at Woolwich and Surgeon to the Ordnance Medical Department. He should not be confused with William Cumberland Cruickshank (1745–1800), who was also a surgeon and Fellow of the Royal Society. In 1801, shortly after Volta's announcement of his pile, Cruickshank built a voltaic pile to facilitate his experiments in electrochemistry. The pile had zinc and silver plates about 1½ in2 (10 cm2) with interposed papers moistened with ammonium chloride. Dissatisfied with this arrangement, Cruickshank devised a horizontal trough battery in which a wooden box was divided into cells, each holding a pair of zinc and silver or zinc and copper plates. Charged with a dilute solution of ammonium chloride, the battery, which was typically of sixty cells, was found to be more convenient to use than a pile and it, or a derivative, was generally adopted for electrochemical experiments including tose of Humphrey Davy during the early years of the nineteenth century.[br]Principal Honours and DistinctionsFRS 1802.Bibliography1801, article in Nicholsons Journal 4:187–91 (describes Cruickshank's original pile). 1801, article in Nicholsons Journal 4:245–64 (describes his trough battery).Further ReadingB.Bowers, 1982, A History of Electric Light and Power, London (a short account). A.Courts, 1959, "William Cruickshank", Annals of Science 15:121–33 GW -
19 FRCVS
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20 FRSPSC
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