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In
the 7th century ad a vast portion of the Eastern world
was overrun by Arab conquerors. In Persia (now Iran),
the Arabs learned of Greek medicine at the schools of
the Nestorian Christians, a sect in exile from the Byzantine
Empire. These schools had preserved many texts lost
in the destruction of the Alexandria Library. Translations
from Greek were instrumental in the development of an
Arabic system of medicine throughout the Arab-speaking
world. Followers of the system, known as Arabists, did
much to elevate professional standards by insisting
on examinations for physicians before licensure. They
introduced numerous therapeutic chemical substances
and excelled in the fields of ophthalmology and public
hygiene.
Important
among Arabist physicians was al-Razi, who was the first
to identify smallpox and measles and to suggest blood
as the cause of infectious diseases. Avenzoar was the
first to describe the parasite causing the skin disease
scabies and was among the earliest to question the authority
of Galen. Maimonides wrote extensively on diet, hygiene,
and toxicology, the study of chemicals and their effect
on the body. Al-Quarashi, also known as Ibn al-Nafis,
wrote commentaries on the writings of Hippocrates and
treatises on diet and eye diseases. He was the first
to determine the pathway of blood, from the right to
the left ventricle via the lungs
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