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{{Unreferenced|date=July 2009}}
{{Unreferenced|date=July 2009}}
'''Antonio Pacchioni''' (1665–1726) was an [[Italy|Italian]] scientist and [[anatomist]], who focused chiefly on the outermost [[meninges|meningeal]] layer of the [[brain]], the [[dura mater]].
'''Antonio Pacchioni''' (1665–1726) was a vital and influential [[Italy|Italian]] scientist and [[anatomist]], who focused chiefly on the outermost [[meninges|meningeal]] layer of the [[brain]], the [[dura mater]].
[[File:Acta Eruditorum - IV fisiologia, 1703 – BEIC 13363829.jpg|thumb|Illustration for the review of ''Disquisitio anatomicae de durae meningis...'' published on ''[[Acta Eruditorum]]'' in 1703]]
[[File:Acta Eruditorum - IV fisiologia, 1703 – BEIC 13363829.jpg|thumb|Illustration for the review of ''Disquisitio anatomicae de durae meningis...'' published on ''[[Acta Eruditorum]]'' in 1703]]


Line 6: Line 6:


'''Pacchioni's granulations''' (or pacchionian bodies), where the arachnoid layer protrudes through the dura, are named for him (although they are now generally known as [[arachnoid granulations]]).
'''Pacchioni's granulations''' (or pacchionian bodies), where the arachnoid layer protrudes through the dura, are named for him (although they are now generally known as [[arachnoid granulations]]).

'''Biography:'''


Pacchioni was born in [[Reggio Emilia, Italy|Reggio Emilia]], where he later attended university. He received his degree in medicine in 1688, and left for [[Rome]] in 1689.
Pacchioni was born in [[Reggio Emilia, Italy|Reggio Emilia]], where he later attended university. He received his degree in medicine in 1688, and left for [[Rome]] in 1689.


Antonio Pacchioni was born in Reggia and studied medicine at the University of his native city, obtaining his degree on April 25, 1688. In 1689 he went to Rome to devote himself to anatomy in particular. He was a friend and student of Marcello Malpighi (1628-1694), who lived in Rome from 1691 to 1694. First attending the Santo Spirito Hospital, he was an assistant physician at the Ospedale della Conzolazione from May 26, 1690 to June 3, 1693, and then remained for six years in Tivoli as the town doctor.
{{Authority control}}

In 1699 Pacchioni returned to Rome and established a successful medical practice. He later became head physician at the Hospital of San Giovanni in Laterano and then at the Ospedale della Consolazione. In Rome, he made the acquaintance of the clinician and botanist Giovanni Maria Lancisi (1654-1720), with whom he collaborated in the publication of the anatomical plates of Eustachius in 1714.

Pacchioni's most important works particularly concerned the anatomy and function of the dura mater. His first dissertation on this dates from 1701 on, the most important being Dissertatio epistolaris de glandulis ... (1705) in which he described the arachnoidal granulations that are named after him.

'''Career and Life:'''

Antonio Pacchioni was born in Reggio Emilia, a small town in northern Italy, on June 13, 1665.1'3'5 However, he was considered Roman by adoption since he spent the most significant years of his life in the Eternal City. "... He was a short man, with oblong face, vivid eye and a rather melancholic temperament .... " Following the educational customs of his time, Pacchioni initially studied philosophy and only later turned to medicine, 5 demonstrating a natural talent for anatomical dissection. He worked under the guidance of Antonio Vallisneri (1661-1730), Professor of Medicine at the University of Padova and member of the Royal Society of London (Vallisneri is also credited with the first description of the anatomical features of Stein�Leventhal syndrome).In 1689, after graduating from the University of Reggio, Pacchioni moved to Rome, attracted by the stimulating cultural life and the distinguished personalities operating in the medical field. Here, he first attended the Ospedaledi S. Spifito in Sassia and then successfully applied for a position as assistant physician at the Ospedale della Consolazione (May 26, 1690), well known at that time for emergency medicine. As stated by Pacchioni himself, this early experience in�volved the frequent management of head injuries, which aroused his particular interest in brain coverings. Thanks to Marcelle Malpighi's support, in July, 1693, Pacchioni became the town doctor in Tivoli, quickly gaining popular esteem and approval. Here he spent 6 years under the patronage of the Duke of Modena at the "Villa d'Este," famous for its wonderful gardens and property. 3'~ Upon his return to Rome, he collected and published in 1701 his first observations on the structure and function of dura mater in the text De Dura Meninge Fabrica et Usu Disquisitio Analomica.

Antonio Pacchioni was a brilliant medical doctor with a great passion for research and a constant devotion to constructive scientific debate, mutual confrontation with colleagues, exchange of experiences, and education of younger colleagues (he often presented candidates in the discussion of their doctoral thesis). Moreover, Paechioni exhibited a remarkable attention to scientific progress beyond Italy's borders as shown by the frequent quotation of foreign authors in his works (Willis and Vieussens among others). Further evidence of his merits is the deferential friendship he shared with great men such as Giambattista Morgagni (1682-1771), Marcello Malpighi, the father of microscopic anatomy (1627- 1694), and especially with Giovanni Maria Lancisi (1654-1720), who requested the collaboration of Pacchioni in the preparation of his famous De Motu Cordis et Aneurismatibus (1728) and in the first edition of the Tabulae Anatomicae (1714) collected by Bartolomeo Eustachio (1500-1574).

In 1700, Pacchioni was on the verge of becoming Lancisi's successor for the Chair of Anatomy at the University La Sapienza, upon the recommendation of Lancisi himself. Sadly, he decided to withdraw -- formally in deference to his competitor Giorgio Baglivi (1668-1707), but more likely because the latter was known to be a protegé of Pope Innocenzo XII.

The year 1705 was a special time in Pacchioni's life: he was appointed ''head physician'' at the ancient Ospedaledi S. Giovanni in Laterano, and published the original description of arachnoid granulations in his Dissertatio Epistolaris de Glandulis Conglobatis Durae Meningis Humanae. He was fellow of several prestigious academies such as the Accademia delle Scienze of Bologna, Accademia de' Fisiocritici of Siena, and the Accademia Cesareo-Leopoldina de' Curiosi della Na�tura of Leipzig; he also attended meetings of the Ro�man Accademia dell' Arcadia under the pseudonym of "Euforo Craneo" ("attentive observer of the skull"). He was sometimes asked for consultation as a ''police doctor.''

'''Final Years:'''

Precarious health later forced Dr. Pacchioni to accept the less demanding charge of ''head physician'' at his favorite Ospedaledella Consolazione, where he worked until retirement. He was struck by an undetermined disease of the central nervous system (perhaps a tumor or intracranial hematoma) that caused seizures, a right hemiparesis, and progressive mental deterioration. He was attended to by his most trusted colleagues and his old master Vallisneri. Antonio Pacchioni died in Rome at 62 years of age, on November 5, 1726.


'''His thoughts and works:'''

Despite his extreme versatility, Antonio Pacchioni is best known as an anatomist, a skilled dissector, and an important contributor to the world of Medicine.. He made significant contributions to the elucidation of the structure and function of dura mater, not limiting himself to gross anatomy, but deeply investigating its fine structure. Following Malpighi's teachings, he ''made use of the microscope'', an '''advanced technology of his time''', and systematically treated the anatomical specimens by original techniques of maceration into "... strong, sour, salted, sweet, and oily fluids .... ". For example, in the Dissertatio Epistotaris..., Pacchioni pointed out how arachnoid villi swell "... to the size of a millet seed... " after dura is "...soaked for a month first into plain water and then into vinegar..." (recommending frequent renewal of the bath in order to avoid smell!)

The interpretation of Pacchioni's brilliant morphological findings was adversely influenced by his adherence to the "iatromechanical doctrine," whereby the function of an organ was merely based on its mechanical activity. Therefore, he believed that dura mater was a special kind of membranous muscle ("musculus suigeneris membranaceus"), comparable to cardiac muscle, made up of several layers of fibers and arranged in three bellies and four tendons; its contractions served to squeeze the glands which, in Malpighi's opinion, constituted the cerebral cortex, pushing their secretion along nerve roots? Among Pacchioni's findings, we recall the description of the tentorial notch (the so-called "Pacchioni's oval foramen"), the observation that dural adherence to the inner table is variable in different areas, and especially the discovery of arachnoid granulations. In 1705, Pacchioni dedicated to Professor Luca Schrok (a German colleague from Augsburg) the ''Dissertatio Epistolaris de Glandulis Conglobatis Durae Meningis Hurnanae, indeque Ortis Lymphaticis'' and ''Piam Meningem produclis.'' One of his popular papers is written in Latin and illustrated with two figures and remarkable for its scientific rigor, careful report of materials and methods, and frequent quotation of up-to-date international literature. While exploring the internal structure of the superior sagittal sinus, Pacchioni was struck by those minute globular bodies (which he named "glandulae conglo-batae"), each wrapped by its own capsule, clustering on either side of the sinus. Numerous thin filaments, which he thought were lymphatic vessels, seemed to bloom from the "glandulae," running toward the pia on one side and penetrating dural layers on the other. Therefore, he concluded that his "glandulae" (glands) had the function of secreting lymph to lubricate the sliding movements between brain and meninges during contractions. Although these speculations may appear grossly in�correct in the light of present knowledge, new observations seem "to do justice" to Antonio Pacchioni. In a recent study, Go, et al., ~ using enzyme ultracnytochemistry, detected Na+/K + adenosine triphosphatase activity on cap cells of arachnoid villi; they proposed that this biochemical mechanism could contribute to CSF absorption. This assumption implies a "'secretory" component in CSF absorption along with the already widely accepted mechanisms. It is remarkable to note that, if this single observation is confirmed, we may have to look at arachnoid villi not simply as hydrostatic pressure-gated valves, but as actual secreting structures: that is, as glands or "glandulae," as Antonio Pacchioni suggested three centuries ago.

'''Works by him:'''

Enrico Benassi:

Carteggi inediti fra il Lancisi, il Pacchioni ed il Morgagni.
Rivista di storia delle scienze mediche e naturali, 1932, 23: 145-169.

Maria Bertolani del Rio:

Antonio Pacchioni 1665-1726.
In, Luigi Barchi, editor: Medici e naturalisti Reggiani (Reggio nell' Emilia), 1935: 659-667.

Pietri Capparoni:

Lo stato di servizio di Antonio Pacchioni all'Ospedale della conzolazione in Roma ed un suo medaglione onorario.
Rivista di storia delle scienze mediche e naturali. 1914, 2: 241-245.

Jacopo Chiappelli:

Notizie intorno alla vita di Antonio Pacchioni da Reggio.
Raccolta d'opuscoli scientifici e filologici, Biblioteca Modenese, Modene 1783, III: 415-419.

'''Bibliography'''

<ref>{{Cite journal|date=1975-12|title=W. Stanford Reid. <italic>Trumpeter of God: A Biography of John Knox</italic>. New York: Charles Scribner's Sons. 1974. Pp. xvi, 353. $12.50|url=http://dx.doi.org/10.1086/ahr/80.5.1340|journal=The American Historical Review|doi=10.1086/ahr/80.5.1340|issn=1937-5239}}</ref> <ref>De durae meningis fabrica et usu disquisito anatomica.
Romae, D. A. Herculis, 1701.</ref> <ref>Dissertatio epistolaris ad Lucam Schroeckium de glandulis conglobatis durae meningis humanae.
Rome, Francesco Buagni, 1705. Frankfurt and Leipzig, 1712.</ref> <ref>Disertt. binae ad . . . illustrandis durae meningis ejusque glandularum structurae atque usibus concinnatae.
Rome, 1713.</ref> <ref>Diss. phys.-anat. de durae meninge humana, novis experimentis . . . auctae et illustratae.
Rome, 1721. A collected edition of his works appeared in Rome in 1721.</ref> <ref>{{Citation|title=Il sistema nervoso autonomo: La storia, il nuovo e l’unità dell’io corporeo tra pensiero scientifico ed ermeneutico|url=http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/88-470-0382-2_10|work=Stabilità funzionale e controllo neuroumorale|pages=145–166|place=Milan|publisher=Springer-Verlag|access-date=2021-11-04}}</ref> <ref>{{Cite journal|last=Brunori|first=Andrea|last2=Vagnozzi|first2=Roberto|last3=Giuffrè|first3=Renato|date=1993-03|title=Antonio Pacchioni (1665–1726): early studies of the dura mater|url=http://dx.doi.org/10.3171/jns.1993.78.3.0515|journal=Journal of Neurosurgery|volume=78|issue=3|pages=515–518|doi=10.3171/jns.1993.78.3.0515|issn=0022-3085}}</ref> <ref>{{Cite journal|last=Londei|first=Luigi|date=1998|title=Fonti per la storia della Segreteria di Stato nell'Archivio di Stato di Roma|url=http://dx.doi.org/10.3406/mefr.1998.4575|journal=Mélanges de l’École française de Rome. Italie et Méditerranée|volume=110|issue=2|pages=519–524|doi=10.3406/mefr.1998.4575|issn=1123-9891}}</ref> <ref>{{Cite journal|last=Go|first=K. Gwan|last2=Houthoff|first2=Hendrik-Jan|last3=Hartsuiker|first3=Johannes|last4=Blaauw|first4=Engbert H.|last5=Havinga|first5=Piet|date=1986-11|title=Fluid secretion in arachnoid cysts as a clue to cerebro-spinal fluid absorption at the arachnoid granulation|url=http://dx.doi.org/10.3171/jns.1986.65.5.0642|journal=Journal of Neurosurgery|volume=65|issue=5|pages=642–648|doi=10.3171/jns.1986.65.5.0642|issn=0022-3085}}</ref> <ref>{{Cite journal|last=Pannuzi|first=Simona|date=2013-11-26|title=La laguna di Ostia : produzione del sale e trasformazione del paesaggio dall'età antica all'età moderna|url=http://dx.doi.org/10.4000/mefrm.1507|journal=Mélanges de l'École française de Rome. Moyen Âge|issue=125-2|doi=10.4000/mefrm.1507|issn=1123-9883}}</ref> <ref>{{Cite journal|date=1824|title=Disquisitio anatomica de pinguedine animali A, C. H. E. Allmer, Doctor medicinae et chirurgiae. Cum tabula aenea. Jenae apud Fr. Maukium 1823. In 4. p. 24. (Pr. 8 ggr.)|url=http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/ardp.18240100215|journal=Archiv der Pharmazie|volume=10|issue=2|pages=98–100|doi=10.1002/ardp.18240100215|issn=0365-6233}}</ref> <ref>{{Cite journal|date=1710-12-31|title=VII. An account of a book intitled, differtatio epistolaris de glandulis conglobatis duræ meningis humanæ, indeque ortis Lymphaticis ad Piam Meningem productis. Authore Antonio Pacchiono. Romæ 1705. 8 vo|url=http://dx.doi.org/10.1098/rstl.1710.0016|journal=Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London|volume=27|issue=328|pages=208–211|doi=10.1098/rstl.1710.0016|issn=0261-0523}}</ref>{{Authority control}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Pacchioni, Antonio}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Pacchioni, Antonio}}
[[Category:Italian anatomists]]
[[Category: Italian anatomists]]
[[Category:1665 births]]
[[Category:1665 births]]
[[Category:1726 deaths]]
[[Category:1726 deaths]]

Revision as of 22:22, 4 November 2021

Antonio Pacchioni (1665–1726) was a vital and influential Italian scientist and anatomist, who focused chiefly on the outermost meningeal layer of the brain, the dura mater.

Illustration for the review of Disquisitio anatomicae de durae meningis... published on Acta Eruditorum in 1703
Illustration for the review of Dissertatio epistolaris de Glandulis... published on Acta Eruditorum in 1706

Pacchioni's granulations (or pacchionian bodies), where the arachnoid layer protrudes through the dura, are named for him (although they are now generally known as arachnoid granulations).

Biography:

Pacchioni was born in Reggio Emilia, where he later attended university. He received his degree in medicine in 1688, and left for Rome in 1689.

Antonio Pacchioni was born in Reggia and studied medicine at the University of his native city, obtaining his degree on April 25, 1688. In 1689 he went to Rome to devote himself to anatomy in particular. He was a friend and student of Marcello Malpighi (1628-1694), who lived in Rome from 1691 to 1694. First attending the Santo Spirito Hospital, he was an assistant physician at the Ospedale della Conzolazione from May 26, 1690 to June 3, 1693, and then remained for six years in Tivoli as the town doctor.

In 1699 Pacchioni returned to Rome and established a successful medical practice. He later became head physician at the Hospital of San Giovanni in Laterano and then at the Ospedale della Consolazione. In Rome, he made the acquaintance of the clinician and botanist Giovanni Maria Lancisi (1654-1720), with whom he collaborated in the publication of the anatomical plates of Eustachius in 1714.

Pacchioni's most important works particularly concerned the anatomy and function of the dura mater. His first dissertation on this dates from 1701 on, the most important being Dissertatio epistolaris de glandulis ... (1705) in which he described the arachnoidal granulations that are named after him.

Career and Life:

Antonio Pacchioni was born in Reggio Emilia, a small town in northern Italy, on June 13, 1665.1'3'5 However, he was considered Roman by adoption since he spent the most significant years of his life in the Eternal City. "... He was a short man, with oblong face, vivid eye and a rather melancholic temperament .... " Following the educational customs of his time, Pacchioni initially studied philosophy and only later turned to medicine, 5 demonstrating a natural talent for anatomical dissection. He worked under the guidance of Antonio Vallisneri (1661-1730), Professor of Medicine at the University of Padova and member of the Royal Society of London (Vallisneri is also credited with the first description of the anatomical features of Stein�Leventhal syndrome).In 1689, after graduating from the University of Reggio, Pacchioni moved to Rome, attracted by the stimulating cultural life and the distinguished personalities operating in the medical field. Here, he first attended the Ospedaledi S. Spifito in Sassia and then successfully applied for a position as assistant physician at the Ospedale della Consolazione (May 26, 1690), well known at that time for emergency medicine. As stated by Pacchioni himself, this early experience in�volved the frequent management of head injuries, which aroused his particular interest in brain coverings. Thanks to Marcelle Malpighi's support, in July, 1693, Pacchioni became the town doctor in Tivoli, quickly gaining popular esteem and approval. Here he spent 6 years under the patronage of the Duke of Modena at the "Villa d'Este," famous for its wonderful gardens and property. 3'~ Upon his return to Rome, he collected and published in 1701 his first observations on the structure and function of dura mater in the text De Dura Meninge Fabrica et Usu Disquisitio Analomica.

Antonio Pacchioni was a brilliant medical doctor with a great passion for research and a constant devotion to constructive scientific debate, mutual confrontation with colleagues, exchange of experiences, and education of younger colleagues (he often presented candidates in the discussion of their doctoral thesis). Moreover, Paechioni exhibited a remarkable attention to scientific progress beyond Italy's borders as shown by the frequent quotation of foreign authors in his works (Willis and Vieussens among others). Further evidence of his merits is the deferential friendship he shared with great men such as Giambattista Morgagni (1682-1771), Marcello Malpighi, the father of microscopic anatomy (1627- 1694), and especially with Giovanni Maria Lancisi (1654-1720), who requested the collaboration of Pacchioni in the preparation of his famous De Motu Cordis et Aneurismatibus (1728) and in the first edition of the Tabulae Anatomicae (1714) collected by Bartolomeo Eustachio (1500-1574).

In 1700, Pacchioni was on the verge of becoming Lancisi's successor for the Chair of Anatomy at the University La Sapienza, upon the recommendation of Lancisi himself. Sadly, he decided to withdraw -- formally in deference to his competitor Giorgio Baglivi (1668-1707), but more likely because the latter was known to be a protegé of Pope Innocenzo XII.

The year 1705 was a special time in Pacchioni's life: he was appointed head physician at the ancient Ospedaledi S. Giovanni in Laterano, and published the original description of arachnoid granulations in his Dissertatio Epistolaris de Glandulis Conglobatis Durae Meningis Humanae. He was fellow of several prestigious academies such as the Accademia delle Scienze of Bologna, Accademia de' Fisiocritici of Siena, and the Accademia Cesareo-Leopoldina de' Curiosi della Na�tura of Leipzig; he also attended meetings of the Ro�man Accademia dell' Arcadia under the pseudonym of "Euforo Craneo" ("attentive observer of the skull"). He was sometimes asked for consultation as a police doctor.

Final Years:

Precarious health later forced Dr. Pacchioni to accept the less demanding charge of head physician at his favorite Ospedaledella Consolazione, where he worked until retirement. He was struck by an undetermined disease of the central nervous system (perhaps a tumor or intracranial hematoma) that caused seizures, a right hemiparesis, and progressive mental deterioration. He was attended to by his most trusted colleagues and his old master Vallisneri. Antonio Pacchioni died in Rome at 62 years of age, on November 5, 1726.


His thoughts and works:

Despite his extreme versatility, Antonio Pacchioni is best known as an anatomist, a skilled dissector, and an important contributor to the world of Medicine.. He made significant contributions to the elucidation of the structure and function of dura mater, not limiting himself to gross anatomy, but deeply investigating its fine structure. Following Malpighi's teachings, he made use of the microscope, an advanced technology of his time, and systematically treated the anatomical specimens by original techniques of maceration into "... strong, sour, salted, sweet, and oily fluids .... ". For example, in the Dissertatio Epistotaris..., Pacchioni pointed out how arachnoid villi swell "... to the size of a millet seed... " after dura is "...soaked for a month first into plain water and then into vinegar..." (recommending frequent renewal of the bath in order to avoid smell!)

The interpretation of Pacchioni's brilliant morphological findings was adversely influenced by his adherence to the "iatromechanical doctrine," whereby the function of an organ was merely based on its mechanical activity. Therefore, he believed that dura mater was a special kind of membranous muscle ("musculus suigeneris membranaceus"), comparable to cardiac muscle, made up of several layers of fibers and arranged in three bellies and four tendons; its contractions served to squeeze the glands which, in Malpighi's opinion, constituted the cerebral cortex, pushing their secretion along nerve roots? Among Pacchioni's findings, we recall the description of the tentorial notch (the so-called "Pacchioni's oval foramen"), the observation that dural adherence to the inner table is variable in different areas, and especially the discovery of arachnoid granulations. In 1705, Pacchioni dedicated to Professor Luca Schrok (a German colleague from Augsburg) the Dissertatio Epistolaris de Glandulis Conglobatis Durae Meningis Hurnanae, indeque Ortis Lymphaticis and Piam Meningem produclis. One of his popular papers is written in Latin and illustrated with two figures and remarkable for its scientific rigor, careful report of materials and methods, and frequent quotation of up-to-date international literature. While exploring the internal structure of the superior sagittal sinus, Pacchioni was struck by those minute globular bodies (which he named "glandulae conglo-batae"), each wrapped by its own capsule, clustering on either side of the sinus. Numerous thin filaments, which he thought were lymphatic vessels, seemed to bloom from the "glandulae," running toward the pia on one side and penetrating dural layers on the other. Therefore, he concluded that his "glandulae" (glands) had the function of secreting lymph to lubricate the sliding movements between brain and meninges during contractions. Although these speculations may appear grossly in�correct in the light of present knowledge, new observations seem "to do justice" to Antonio Pacchioni. In a recent study, Go, et al., ~ using enzyme ultracnytochemistry, detected Na+/K + adenosine triphosphatase activity on cap cells of arachnoid villi; they proposed that this biochemical mechanism could contribute to CSF absorption. This assumption implies a "'secretory" component in CSF absorption along with the already widely accepted mechanisms. It is remarkable to note that, if this single observation is confirmed, we may have to look at arachnoid villi not simply as hydrostatic pressure-gated valves, but as actual secreting structures: that is, as glands or "glandulae," as Antonio Pacchioni suggested three centuries ago.

Works by him:

Enrico Benassi:

Carteggi inediti fra il Lancisi, il Pacchioni ed il Morgagni. Rivista di storia delle scienze mediche e naturali, 1932, 23: 145-169.

Maria Bertolani del Rio:

Antonio Pacchioni 1665-1726. In, Luigi Barchi, editor: Medici e naturalisti Reggiani (Reggio nell' Emilia), 1935: 659-667.

Pietri Capparoni:

Lo stato di servizio di Antonio Pacchioni all'Ospedale della conzolazione in Roma ed un suo medaglione onorario. Rivista di storia delle scienze mediche e naturali. 1914, 2: 241-245.

Jacopo Chiappelli:

Notizie intorno alla vita di Antonio Pacchioni da Reggio. Raccolta d'opuscoli scientifici e filologici, Biblioteca Modenese, Modene 1783, III: 415-419.

Bibliography

[1] [2] [3] [4] [5] [6] [7] [8] [9] [10] [11] [12]

  1. ^ "W. Stanford Reid. <italic>Trumpeter of God: A Biography of John Knox</italic>. New York: Charles Scribner's Sons. 1974. Pp. xvi, 353. $12.50". The American Historical Review. 1975-12. doi:10.1086/ahr/80.5.1340. ISSN 1937-5239. {{cite journal}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  2. ^ De durae meningis fabrica et usu disquisito anatomica. Romae, D. A. Herculis, 1701.
  3. ^ Dissertatio epistolaris ad Lucam Schroeckium de glandulis conglobatis durae meningis humanae. Rome, Francesco Buagni, 1705. Frankfurt and Leipzig, 1712.
  4. ^ Disertt. binae ad . . . illustrandis durae meningis ejusque glandularum structurae atque usibus concinnatae. Rome, 1713.
  5. ^ Diss. phys.-anat. de durae meninge humana, novis experimentis . . . auctae et illustratae. Rome, 1721. A collected edition of his works appeared in Rome in 1721.
  6. ^ "Il sistema nervoso autonomo: La storia, il nuovo e l'unità dell'io corporeo tra pensiero scientifico ed ermeneutico", Stabilità funzionale e controllo neuroumorale, Milan: Springer-Verlag, pp. 145–166, retrieved 2021-11-04
  7. ^ Brunori, Andrea; Vagnozzi, Roberto; Giuffrè, Renato (1993-03). "Antonio Pacchioni (1665–1726): early studies of the dura mater". Journal of Neurosurgery. 78 (3): 515–518. doi:10.3171/jns.1993.78.3.0515. ISSN 0022-3085. {{cite journal}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  8. ^ Londei, Luigi (1998). "Fonti per la storia della Segreteria di Stato nell'Archivio di Stato di Roma". Mélanges de l’École française de Rome. Italie et Méditerranée. 110 (2): 519–524. doi:10.3406/mefr.1998.4575. ISSN 1123-9891.
  9. ^ Go, K. Gwan; Houthoff, Hendrik-Jan; Hartsuiker, Johannes; Blaauw, Engbert H.; Havinga, Piet (1986-11). "Fluid secretion in arachnoid cysts as a clue to cerebro-spinal fluid absorption at the arachnoid granulation". Journal of Neurosurgery. 65 (5): 642–648. doi:10.3171/jns.1986.65.5.0642. ISSN 0022-3085. {{cite journal}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  10. ^ Pannuzi, Simona (2013-11-26). "La laguna di Ostia : produzione del sale e trasformazione del paesaggio dall'età antica all'età moderna". Mélanges de l'École française de Rome. Moyen Âge (125–2). doi:10.4000/mefrm.1507. ISSN 1123-9883. {{cite journal}}: no-break space character in |title= at position 19 (help)
  11. ^ "Disquisitio anatomica de pinguedine animali A, C. H. E. Allmer, Doctor medicinae et chirurgiae. Cum tabula aenea. Jenae apud Fr. Maukium 1823. In 4. p. 24. (Pr. 8 ggr.)". Archiv der Pharmazie. 10 (2): 98–100. 1824. doi:10.1002/ardp.18240100215. ISSN 0365-6233.
  12. ^ "VII. An account of a book intitled, differtatio epistolaris de glandulis conglobatis duræ meningis humanæ, indeque ortis Lymphaticis ad Piam Meningem productis. Authore Antonio Pacchiono. Romæ 1705. 8 vo". Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London. 27 (328): 208–211. 1710-12-31. doi:10.1098/rstl.1710.0016. ISSN 0261-0523.