| 
                        
                            | 
        
            | Article Details :: |  
            |  |  
            | 
            | Article Name : |  |  | GLIMPSES FROM THE P ASTIN  ANA TOMY–  AREVIEW |  | Author Name : |  |  | ANUJ JAIN |  | Publisher : |  |  | Ashok Yakkaldevi |  | Article Series No. : |  |  | ROR-270 |  | Article : |  |  |  | Author Profile |  | Abstract : |  |  | As far  as we know ,  anatomy is  the  oldest medical science.  Cave paintings of  the  early  Stone  Age,  about  30,000  years  ago,  show  a  simple  knowledge  of  the  anatomy  of  animals, and it  is  assumed that  these  cave dwellers applied some  of their  anatomical  knowledge  to  their  own  bodies.  The  civilizations  of  the  Babylonians,  as  Syrians,  Egyptians,  Chinese,  and  Hindus made no  serious  attempt  to  learn  anatomy  because  they  were  inter ested  in  the  supernatural  world, not the  natural one, and their  cultures  placed  strong religious restrictions against debasing the  body .  Any anatomical dissections that  were  performed  on  animals  were  made to  "study"  organs  in  an  effort  to  predict  the  futur e  and  to  tell  fortunes. There is  no doubt that  medicine of a kind had its  roots in  prehistoric times,  and  that  in  the  Neolithic Age, a technical  tradition  expressed  in  practical skills  by craftsmen  developed  alongside  a  spiritual  tradition  perpetuated  by  magical  and  priestly  cults.  For  centuries,  except  on  rare  occasions,  the  practice  of  the  craftsman  remained  the  handmaid  of  theor etical  dogma,  it  is  only  within  the  last  400  years  that  the  conception  emerged  that  the  art  of  medicine  and  surgery  can  be  reasonably  based  only  on  knowledge  of  the  structure  of  the  body .  This review focuses  on how the  study of anatomy in  different parts of world has  evolved  thr ough  the  centuries.  Anatomical  knowledge  in  ancient  India  was  derived  principally  fr om  animal  sacrifice,  chance  observations  of  impr operly  buried  human  bodies,  and  examinations  of  patients  made  by  doctors  during  tr eatment.  The  V edic  philosophies form the basis of the  Ayurvedic tradition, which is considered to be one of  the  oldest  known  systems  of  medicine.Two sets  of  Indian  texts  form  the  foundation  of  Ayurvedic  medicine,  the  Susruta  Samhita  and  the  Charaka  Samhita.The  Susruta  Samhita  provided  important  surgical  and  anatomical  information  of  the  understanding  of  anatomy by Indians in the 6th century BCE. Here we review the anatomical knowledge  known  to  the  mankind. |  | Keywords : |  |  | Susruta  Samhita ,Susruta  Samhita ,Susruta  Samhita ,Susruta  Samhitaverapamile link  verapamil wikipedia,verapamile link  verapamil wikipedia
 |  |  |  |