VENDU
2 volumes, 8vo (204 x 128 mm) XXXIV (including avis, title, dedication), 1 nn.l. (errata), 437, 8 pp. for volume I ; XIII pp., 1 nn.l. (errata), 404 pp. for volume II. Mid nineteenth-cenutry calf backed boards, flat spine gilt.
1 in stock
NLM, p. 342; Garrison-Morton, 5833,1; Becker Collection, 293; Waller, I, 7291; not in Wellcome.
First edition.
Pellier de Quengsy (1751-1835) was one of the first to use an artificial cornea (kerato-prosthesis). As early as 1789, he raised the possibility of replacing a diseased cornea with a synthetic one, a project that is still in development today. In his book, Pellier de Quengsy imagines an artificial cornea made from a fragment of glass placed in a silver ring and sutured to the sclera using cotton threads. It is illustrated with plates describing the instruments required and the technique envisaged.
“The first separate book on ophthalmic surgery” (Garrison Morton).
Profusely illustrated with 32 copper-engraved folding plates.
A good copy. Some plates or sections slightly browned.
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