La diabetes mellitus en la época y en la obra de Roberto Nóvoa Santos (1885-1933)un análisis histórico médico

  1. Ponte Hernando, Fernando J.
Supervised by:
  1. Juan José Fernández Teijeiro Director
  2. Jorge Teijeiro Vidal Director

Defence university: Universidade da Coruña

Fecha de defensa: 22 July 2011

Committee:
  1. Fernando Cordido Carballido Chair
  2. Carlos González Guitián Secretary
  3. Emilio Casariego Vales Committee member
  4. Thomas F. Glick Committee member
  5. Enrique José Jiménez Gómez Committee member

Type: Thesis

Teseo: 312448 DIALNET lock_openRUC editor

Abstract

The modern epoch of diabetes knowledgement began around 1674, with the publication of Thomas Willis's Pharmaceutice Rationalis sive diatriba de Medicamentorum Operationibus in Humano Corpore. From then until 1921, the year in which insulin was discovered, researchers in all civilized countries made important gains in alleviating the illness. During the "Silver Age" of Spanish culture, which Laín Entralgo places between 1898 and 1936, leading North American researchers and clinicians like Allen and Joslin and Europeans like Falta, Pende, Krehl, Carrasco i Formiguera, Pi Suñer, Marañón and Nóvoa Santos, were at the height of their powers, which is why we focus on their diabetological work both before and alter the transcendental discovery of insulin. A substantial part of Nóvoa Santos's research was devoted to diabetes. To its study he contributed another transcendental discovery, that of the role of secretin as an incretor, as well as its therapeutic use in the treatment of diabetes some ten years before the Belgian La Barre, anticipating, in 1924, the role which incretins now play in the twenty-first century. He was also a precocious contributor to the physiopathological and semantic concept of insulin resistance.