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Alexander Savvas

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Alexander Savvas


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Alexander Savvas (1907–1981) was a Greek Professor of Medicine at the Aristotle University of Thessaloniki, Faculty of Anatomy. He wrote a number of anatomy books and research protocols, and was influential among Greek physicians via his educational method and great use of Greek language and medical terminology.

Contents

Alexander Savvas Artists Legends ALEXANDER SAVVAS Documentary and Travel

Biography

He was born in Pergamon (now Bergama) in Asia Minor on March 10, 1907. Son of a soap and oil trader, he was the oldest of the four children of the family of Panagiotis Savva. His school years are characterized by the intensity of the period, resulting in the destruction and expulsion of the Greek population in Asia Minor. He studied at the Municipal School of Pergamon, the Elementary School of Mytilene, in the second primary male school in Mytilene, in the historic Kydoniai Gymnasium (school of the great centers of Asia Minor), in the Demi-gymnasium of Pergamon and Athens High School. Outstanding student throughout the course of the school years, and it should be noted that at the age of 15 years his whole family found tragic death because of the war (1922) and after the pause of his studies for two years he ended High School with honors in Athens (1927) while working hard for his survival.

In 1927 he entered medical school and succeeded especially in the course of Anatomy under Professor G. Sklavounos. In 1929 he was appointed assistant in Anatomy "secretary second class" and an unpaid assistant in the Laboratory of Histology-Embryology, while working to maintaine himself. In 1934 he received his degree with a grade of "Excellent" and in 1939 submitted his doctoral thesis entitled "Contribution to the study of human renal artery (after own observations)", so was acclaimed Doctor of Medicine from the University of Athens, with "Excellent". In 1940, with the start of the Greco-Italian War, he joined the Greek Army as a reservist army assistant surgeon, and served at the Military Hospital of Thessaloniki and in the Field Surgery of Korytsa (Korçë) as a surgeon. In 1942 he submitted his candidacy for the position of Professor of Medicine University of Thessaloniki, but N. Michalakeas was elected to the seat. Savvas continued to prepare cadavers, teach, and create histological preparations of anatomy in Athens, as a member of the Medical Society of Athens, and teacher of Anatomy and Physiology to the students at the National College of Physical Education. In 1946 his position in Athens ended, but in the academic year 1948-1949 he was called back as honorary director.

In October 1949 he published his dissertation on fellowship with the title "On the formation of the neural mesh of man" and went to Thessaloniki, where he took up a position as teacher in Anatomy. In March 1950 he was elected Professor of Anatomy at the Medical School of the Aristotle University; the election was cancelled in May, and he was elected to the position of temporary Professor of Anatomy in May 1951. During 1953, he worked in Stockholm, on a scholarship from the World Health Organization, on the microscopic anatomy of the central nervous system. In January 22, 1954 he was elected full Professor of Descriptive Anatomy.

In the academic year 1963-1964, he was elected Dean of the Faculty of Medicine. He retired on August 31, 1968. He died at the age of 74, in 1981.

Work

Savvas offered a premium educational project to prospective physicians on the Science of Anatomy, Histology and Embryology human both theoretical and laboratory level. He has published and research work. During the tenure of Professor Al. Savva occurred transportation Anatomy of the historic building of the road Katsimidou to the new buildings of the Medical School campus thus fulfilling the dream of Professor for a modern and well-equipped Anatomy.

Personal life

Savvas married Zoe Alivizatou in 1951, with whom he had a son, Panagiotis, in 1952.

Publications

• About the tendons records good abdominal muscles (after own observations) (May 1938).

• Periptosis right aortic arch without dexiokardias after rare anomaly of the right lung (1939).

• On a case of bilateral absence of muscle imiymenodous (May 1939).

• Contribution to the study of human renal artery (after own observations) (doctoral thesis) (1939).

• About the position of the bifurcation of the aorta (1940).

• About the collection "Valsamaki" (July 1940).

• Rare periptosis doubling of the inferior vena cava met'aplasias the right kidney and ureter (March 1949).

• About the doubling of the central channel (Rolandi) of the human brain. (September 1949).

• On the formation of human nerve plexus (October 1949).

• Anatomy Notes (three issues summary Anatomy).

• Human Anatomy Courses (three-volume textbook teaching Mimeographed) (1951).

• Faseranalyse des fasciculus longitudinalis medialis (1954).

• Periptosis front duo (1955).

• Periptosis thorakopagous (1955).

• Rarely periptosis left inferior vena cava. Bumpy ekfysis the right subclavian artery and both carotids (1955).

• Human Anatomy in four volumes (Volume 1st, 1957).

• On the so-called "pre-sacral nerve." Contribution to the study of the pelvic plexus (1958).

• Human Anatomy in four volumes (2nd Volume, 1958-1961).

• Human Anatomy in four volumes (Volume 3rd, 1967).

• Elements of Human Anatomy (Teaching guide for medical assistants, 1969).

• Compendium of Human Anatomy Atlas (Concise two-volume reference book, 1979).

References

Alexander Savvas Wikipedia