1: Chronologic Highlights
2: The Phenomenon of Raymond Adams
3: Education and Professional Endeavors
A. A Boy in Oregon
B. The University of Oregon: Finding His Game
C. In All the Splendor: The Study of Medicine at Duke
University
D. Neurology Residency: Massachusetts General Hospital
E. Psychiatry Fellowship with Stanley Cobb: Massachusetts General
Hospital
F. Psychiatry Fellowship: A Year with Eugen Kagn at Yale
G. Boston City Hospital: 1941-1951
H. Return to Massachusetts General Hospital: The Early Years,
1951-1954
I. Sabbatical Year in Europe: 1954-1955
J. The Bullard Professor: 1954-1977
K. Building Pediatric Neurology
4: Investigations and Ideas
A. Metabolic Disease
B. Alcoholism
C. Memory
D. Cerebrovascular Diseases
E. Infectious Diseases
F. Demyelinative Diseases and Neuroimmunology
G. Peripheral Nerve Diseases
H. Muscle Diseases
I. Hydrocephalus
J. Pathologic and Clinicopathologic Concepts
K. Writing
L. Orienting Ideas in Neurology
5: Family, Retirement, and Old Age
A. Family Life
B. Retirement and Old Age
6: Major Original Contributions of Raymond Adams
A. Neoplastic Diseases
B. Cerebrovascular Diseases
C. Demyelinative Diseases and Neuroimmunology
D. Muscle Diseases
E. Nerve Diseases
F. Infectious Diseases
G. Hydrocephalus
H. Liver Diseases
I. Alcohol Withdrawal
J. Nutritional Diseases
K. Other Metabolic Diseases
L. Memory Disorders
M. Movement Disorders
N. Neuroophthalmic Disorders
O. Miscellaneous Contributions
7: Books of Raymond Adams
8: The Accomplishment and Legacy of Raymond Adams
Appendices
"...[a] gem of a book..."--E.F.M. Wijdicks, Mayo Clinic in
Neurocritical Care
"In his new book, Raymond Adams, A Life of Mind and Muscle, author
Robert Laureno covers the seminal contributions to medicine of Ray
Adams, MD'37, HS'38, a School of Medicine Alumnus who went on to
become one of the giants of neurology...Adams, who died in 2008,
was one of the first recipients of a Distinguished Alumnus Award
from the Duke Medical Alumni Association in 1969."--As mentioned in
the Duke University School of Medicine Alumni News
"In this thorough and comprehensive oral history, Robert Laureno
reveals much about this important and complicated figure....Robert
Laureno has done a great service to neurology and historians of the
neurosciences by persevering through the work entailed in producing
this volume....one of the most useful published sources on
post-Second World War neurology."--The Neuro Times, a historical
blog dedicated to neurology and neuroscience
"Robert Laureno, MD, a noted neurologist and neurological educator
in his own right, has produced an excellent biography of Raymond D.
Adams, MD, whom many regard as the father of modern
neurology....Dr. Adams played a huge role in shaping the field of
neurology as we know it now, and Dr. Laureno thoroughly documents
each step of the way through eight chapters, 50 pages of
appendices, and an index. We get to see a more personal side of the
man through 66
photographs of every period of Dr. Adam's life, including a number
of group photos from his professional years. Other photographs
depict family members and home life, title pages of important
papers and
monographs, correspondence by and about Dr. Adams, clinical notes,
gross pathological specimens, and photomicrographs of pathology
slides...Dr. Laureno has done a masterful job of summarizing the
life and times of Raymond D. Adams and the profound impact he had
on the shape of modern neurology."--Neurology Today
"...we are treated to a full-scale biography, largely in the
question-and-answer format of an oral history...I thank Laureno for
a wonderful book about one of the true greats in the history of
neurology."--As reviewed by Lewis P. Rowland, Columbia University
Medical Center, in Archives of Neurology
"...exemplary...The well-written introductory essay gives an
overview of his life and educational work. The subsequent sections
of the book contain actual interviews with Dr. Adams, highlighting
the accomplishments of each period. The appendices also provide
instructive commentary on his struggles as an academic neurologist,
many of which seem to be universal to academia...In addition,
Laureno offers glimpses of Raymond Adams as a child, husband,
and
father."--Journal of Neuropathology and Experimental Neurology
"The publication of Robert Laureno's Raymond Adams: A Life of Mind
and Muscle has surpassed Oxford University Press's objective of
'excellence in research, scholarship, and education...Adams seemed
to know everything worth knowing about the human nervous system,
while in this extraordinary and worthy opus, Laureno's scrupulous
stewardship of a difficult task has provided an analytic,
empathetic, and understandable account of a medical pioneer's
acquisitive intelligence, enthusiasm, and complex, productive life,
right to its end. Deserving to be read, savored, ruminated on, and
reread, Raymond Adams: A Life of Mind and Muscle has earned its
place in the
libraries and on the nightstands of thoughtful scholars,
physicians, and medical historians."--As reviewed by David A.
Morowitz, MD, in JAMA
"...a rich historical source....an entertaining book that not only
provides information on this influential neurologist, but also
gives an impression of medicine and neurology during a large part
of the 20th century."--As reviewed by Peter J. Koeler in
Neurology
"...shed[s] an important and revisionist light on the period in
which neurology underwent it's greatest social and scientific
advancements...fascinating and enjoyable."--BRAIN
"...an important addition to the library of neuroscience
biography...a very readable book, and I would encourage anyone
interested in the history of American neurology to obtain a copy."
--Robert A. Brumback, MD, Creighton University School of Medicine,
Omaha, NE, USA
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