RESUMO
Visual art images narrate the evolution of humankind including different and specific wound managing strategies. Through the observation of some notable art works we explore the empiric historical progress in wound healing and the main reasons they may have been represented. We briefly examine the cultural, symbolic, magical or religious beliefs that have conditioned the approach to a fundamental vital need of humanity: to heal a wound.
RESUMO
The history of the restoration of the masterpiece the Virgin and Child with Canon van der Paele by Jan van Eyck focuses on the expertise of an acute observer, a dermatologist, who noted the removal of an important clinical skin detail-a lesion on the lower lip. The author's re-evaluation of the historic images before and after the restoration confirms the observation made by Jules Desneux, a Belgian dermatologist, in 1951. The author read the book that Cesare Brandi, an Italian restorer, published in 1960 technically detailing the error and the inattentive restoration. In addition, the author found and read the book published in 1951 by Desneux, in which the dermatologist accurately and brilliantly reports the skin lesions of the aged canon and brings to life the absence of the nodule of the lip.
Assuntos
Fissura Palatina , Idoso , Criança , Humanos , Lábio , PeleRESUMO
Neurocutaneous syndromes are a group of genetic disorders affecting the skin, the central and peripheral nervous system, and the eye with congenital abnormalities and/or tumors. Manifestations may also involve the heart, vessels, lungs, kidneys, endocrine glands and bones. When people with these disorders are portrayed in works of art, physicians have speculated on possible diagnoses. In particular, many figures have been labeled as possibly having a neurocutaneous disorder, sometimes distorting the popular conception of these diseases. We review numerous documents, drawings, prints, lithographs, xylographs, and portraits which span the ages from antiquity to the era of the pioneers behind the eponyms, depicting a large spectrum of neurocutaneous disorders.
Assuntos
Síndromes Neurocutâneas , Humanos , PeleRESUMO
We report the interesting experience of the African Village of Hope (Dodoma, Tanzania) where HIV-positive orphan children have been hosted, cured, and educated in the last 15 years. The particular attention to beauty in the education of the children amazed us when we were in the village working as doctors. The project and the effort to create such a model of social and medical assistance were born from the idea of the founders, Sister Maria Rosaria Gargiulo and Don Vincenzo Boselli. In light of this experience and of the healthy result obtained in the village, we believe that education in the perception of beauty is a formative aspect for all children, but may also be a powerful adjuvant therapy in severely immunocompromised young patients.