Reference edition:
Theodori Prisciani Euporiston libri III, cum physicorum fragmento et additamentis pseudoTheodoreis, editi a Valentino Rose ; accedunt Vindiciani Afri quae feruntur reliquiae Lipsiae 1894, pp. 428-463 (Bibliotheca Scriptorum Graecorum et Romanorum Teubneriana).
This teatise has been preserved in many redactions, none of which corresponds to the original text. According to its preface, the text is based on Greek sources and deals with different parts of the human body and their functions (§1-17). The remaining chapters focus on conception, the importance of the number seven, embryology, and birth (§18-25). Faced with the impossibility of reconstructing a uniform text from the individual testimonia, Rose edited a version of the text that presents five versions transmitted by pre-Salernitan manuscripts in parallel. Sudhoff published two other redactions that are present in many late medieval manuscripts, and Schipper recently published a third that was edited and translated by Cilliers:
-Vindiciani Gynaeciorum recensio C: Montecassino, 97, early 10th c., ff. 6a-8a.
Theodori Prisciani Euporiston libri III cum Physicorum fragmento et additamentis pseudo-Theodoreis, editi a V. Rose. Accedunt Vindiciani Afri quae feruntur reliquiae, Leipzig, B. G. Teubner, 1894, p. 427-461
The text appears after the Epistula ad Pentadium under the title Contra dicit scrutari uiscera. It contains the entirety of the text, apart from certain chapters in the anatomical section (§6, 14, 15) and the final section on newborns and their senses. [M. E. Vázquez Buján; tr. C. L. Caterine]