Angelo Zulatti

See also: Zulatti

Angelo Zulatti , born in 1732, with Lissuri (Céphalonie), Italian doctor.

It was accepted doctor of medicine in 1750 with Padoue, after having made good studies at the university of this city. It was fixed then at Bologna, where it obtained soon many successes. In 1752, it published in Florence Nue will lettera AD a medico will sopra the riflessioni sul vitto pitagorico di Giuseppe Pujati medico di Feltre , in which it fights the opinions of Guiseppe Pujatti, which had tackled the principles emitted by Cocchi in its Dissertation on the mode pythagorician , and supports with this last that Pythagore knew truths principles of the generation of the animals, the spherical shape of the ground, the true astronomical laws, etc

Zulatti left in 1754 for Constantinople, attached to the ambassador of Venice in Turkey, Dona, in the capacity as doctor. It continued in this city the course of its medical research, and it published in 1758, one year before Tissot, Compendio di medicina pra- tica, nel quale if descrivono the principali malattie LED corpo umano; idiot a ampio riceltario in fine ; this work was accepted scientists, and, although it was reprinted with Venice, in 1764, and translated into modern Greek, it became rare.

Of return to Venice, to have finished its Résumé shortly after medicine practices , Angelo Zulatti was one of the first to have recourse to the magnet in the nervous diseases, and, having obtained some successes by its novel mode of treatment, it published, in 1758, in the collection of Calogera of the Osservatione fatta in Venezia sopro a nuovo the USA untied calamita, O interned the efficacia untied calamita applicata esternamente nelle convulsioni , which were reproduced by various special collections of Italy and even of France. Named, in 1762, doctor as a chief of the military hospital in Venice, Zulatti was distinguished during the epidemic from Fièvre malignant scarlet fever which, this year even, caused of so many devastations in the surroundings of Venice, and published soon after a curious work entitled Mixti bet for the third time generis scarlatina, maligna and epidemica flees, quam in vicinisque Cephaloniœ urbe locis anno 1763 grassantem vidit amicus drive sin gularis, idemque medicus doctissimus, Angélus Zulattus .

Zulatti died in November 1798.

In addition to the works which we quoted, one still owes him remarkable a Description of a Tétanos observed with Bologna in 1751 , published in Venice in 1762; a Latin letter on a singular case of Gravel, printed in the medical Newspaper of Orteschi, T. 6 (1767), and of many observations on the Inoculation, printed in Venice, in 1768, under the title: Notisie dell' innesti di' vaiuolo fatti m Cefalonia , which one finds in the newspaper of Orteschi (T. 6, p. 267).

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