Hippocrates was a Greek doctor until today, leaving the heritage of ancient Greece. His moral and moral standards are the basis of his fine work on his teaching and human research. He firmly believes that poor health and illness are the result of a natural process that can be discovered and cured through careful clinical reasoning and observation. Hippocrates teaches and manifests signs of illness throughout Greece and tells the doctor how to analyze and treat certain diseases.
In Greece, Greek physician Hippocrates, the "father of modern medicine" laid the foundation for a reasonable medical approach. Hippocrates introduced the Hippocratic oath to the doctor. It is reasonable and usable today, the first person who classifies diseases as acute, chronic, endemic and endemic and uses it. "Exacerbation, recurrence, resolution, crisis, seizure, peak period and recovery period" and so on. Greek doctor Galen is also one of the greatest surgeons in the ancient world and has performed many bold surgeries, including brain and ophthalmic surgery. After the end of the Western Roman Empire and after the early Middle Ages, the Greek medical tradition gradually faded in Western Europe, but was constantly discontinued in the eastern Roman Empire (Byzantine Empire).
Centuries later, Greek father of Medicine Hippocrates (460 BC - 370 BC) used the term Calkinos to represent several types of cancer. This is a surprisingly accurate description of cancer. Inspection of cancer under the microscope stretches multiple needles from the main cell and grabs robustly adjacent tissue. In the 2nd century AD, Greek doctor Galen used the term oncos (swelling). Because cancer is usually detected as a hard subcutaneous nodule under the breast. All oncology, oncologists, and oncology have been found from this root. . Galen also uses the suffix --oma to indicate cancer. Celsus (25 BC - 50 AD - 50 AD) is an encyclopedia of Rome, wrote a medical text De Medicina translating the Greek word "karkinos" into the Latin crab "cancer".