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Microscopy in Camillo Golgi's Times
Authors:Gustavo Merico
Institution:Département de chimie‐biologie , Université du Québec à Trois‐Rivières , C.P. 500, Trois‐Rivières, Québec, Canada , G9A 5H7 Fax: E-mail: Regis_OIry@uqtr.uquebec.ca
Abstract:The research performed by Camillo Golgi in histology and pathology dates from 1865, the year in which he obtained his MD degree, to 1923, when his last scientific article was published. Beginning in the mid-1855s, microscope manufacturers in Europe started producing objectives based on the principle of immersion introduced in 1847 by Giovan Battista Amici. The immersion objectives greatly improved the resolution of microscopic observations at high magnifications. From 1860 to 1872, technological improvements in microscope optics and the practicality of their use provided a larger community of investigators effective tools needed to study the structure of the nervous system. This progress in microscopy was associated with the application of new histological techniques, mastered by the chromoargentic reaction introduced by Golgi in 1873. In 1872, further progress in microscopy stemmed from the application of notions of applied physics to the production of microscope optics. These developments in microscopy will be briefly reviewed here.
Keywords:Brain  spinal cord  Mondino dei Luzzi  Guido da Vigevano  medieval neuroanatomy
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