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WHONAMEDIT?
Whonamedit? is a biographical dictionary of medical eponyms. Disclaimer: Whonamedit? does not give medical advice. This survey of medical eponyms and the persons behind them isLÉON BOUVERET
Léon Bouveret grew up in St-Julien-sur-Reyssouze, a small town 70 km north of Lyon. His father was a physician who trained Leon from early childhood. A gifted child, Léon distinguished himself in high school, where he even won an academic competition in Latin verse.BRADLEY'S SYNDROME
An epidemic disease affecting both sexes and with onset at all ages, usually occurring during the winter months and early spring, and beginning in early morning. It is characterized by nausea, sudden and profuse vomiting, anorexia, constipation, pain diarrhoea and, less frequently, constipation, pale stools, headache, generalized aching,and
ISIDORE SNAPPER
Isidore Snapper studied and received his doctorate in 1913 in Groningen.He worked at the university obstetrical clinic in Utrecht, at the physiological institute in Groningen as a collaborator of Hijmans van den Bergh, and at the same clinic in Amsterdam under Pieter Klaases Pel (1852-1919).HERMANN RICHNER
Hermann Richner went to school at Davos until 1927 and then a year at Chur. He started his medical studies in Geneva and continued them in Zurich, excepted one semester in Kiel. He graduated 1934 and received his doctor's degree two years later. We thank PatrickEDWARD BACH
Edward Bach grew up in Bermingham, and as a boy is said to have shown a keen concern for human suffering. He worked in his father's brass foundry and observed the loneliness, alienation and apathy that appeared to affect the general health of many of his co-workers. ROBERT DOUGLAS SWEET Douglas Sweet was a consultant dermatologist at the Plymouth and Torbay group of hospitals. He was born in Weybridge, Surrey, but went to school in New Zealand, at Wanganui. He returned to the UK to study at Cambridge and at St Thomas's hospital. He qualified in 1942 and served in the RAMC from 1944 to 1946.JEAN PIERRE FALRET
Jean Pierre Falret commenced his medical studies in Paris in 1811, at the early age of 17. Inspired by Philippe Pinel (1745-1826) and Jean Étienne Dominique Esquirol (1772-1840), he devoted himself particularly to mental diseases, of which he was to become one of the most prominent representatives. THOMAS CASPAR GILCHRIST Thomas Caspar Gilchrist studied medicine at the Manchester Royal Infirmary. He left England for America in 1890 and from 1897 he was clinical professor of dermatology at the University of Maryland, from 1898 in the same position at the Johns Hopkins Hospital, Baltimore. In 1907 the University of Maryland conferred on him an honorary M.D.MAURICE GOLDENHAR
Maurice Goldenhar emigrated from Belgium to the United States of America in 1940. After the war he returned to Europe for medical studies, and then returned to the United States. He was a general practitioner who practiced in the U.S. all of his life. The "Maurice Goldenhar Family Medicine Update", Stony Brook University Hospital,State
WHONAMEDIT?
Whonamedit? is a biographical dictionary of medical eponyms. Disclaimer: Whonamedit? does not give medical advice. This survey of medical eponyms and the persons behind them isLÉON BOUVERET
Léon Bouveret grew up in St-Julien-sur-Reyssouze, a small town 70 km north of Lyon. His father was a physician who trained Leon from early childhood. A gifted child, Léon distinguished himself in high school, where he even won an academic competition in Latin verse.BRADLEY'S SYNDROME
An epidemic disease affecting both sexes and with onset at all ages, usually occurring during the winter months and early spring, and beginning in early morning. It is characterized by nausea, sudden and profuse vomiting, anorexia, constipation, pain diarrhoea and, less frequently, constipation, pale stools, headache, generalized aching,and
ISIDORE SNAPPER
Isidore Snapper studied and received his doctorate in 1913 in Groningen.He worked at the university obstetrical clinic in Utrecht, at the physiological institute in Groningen as a collaborator of Hijmans van den Bergh, and at the same clinic in Amsterdam under Pieter Klaases Pel (1852-1919).HERMANN RICHNER
Hermann Richner went to school at Davos until 1927 and then a year at Chur. He started his medical studies in Geneva and continued them in Zurich, excepted one semester in Kiel. He graduated 1934 and received his doctor's degree two years later. We thank PatrickEDWARD BACH
Edward Bach grew up in Bermingham, and as a boy is said to have shown a keen concern for human suffering. He worked in his father's brass foundry and observed the loneliness, alienation and apathy that appeared to affect the general health of many of his co-workers. ROBERT DOUGLAS SWEET Douglas Sweet was a consultant dermatologist at the Plymouth and Torbay group of hospitals. He was born in Weybridge, Surrey, but went to school in New Zealand, at Wanganui. He returned to the UK to study at Cambridge and at St Thomas's hospital. He qualified in 1942 and served in the RAMC from 1944 to 1946.JEAN PIERRE FALRET
Jean Pierre Falret commenced his medical studies in Paris in 1811, at the early age of 17. Inspired by Philippe Pinel (1745-1826) and Jean Étienne Dominique Esquirol (1772-1840), he devoted himself particularly to mental diseases, of which he was to become one of the most prominent representatives. THOMAS CASPAR GILCHRIST Thomas Caspar Gilchrist studied medicine at the Manchester Royal Infirmary. He left England for America in 1890 and from 1897 he was clinical professor of dermatology at the University of Maryland, from 1898 in the same position at the Johns Hopkins Hospital, Baltimore. In 1907 the University of Maryland conferred on him an honorary M.D.MAURICE GOLDENHAR
Maurice Goldenhar emigrated from Belgium to the United States of America in 1940. After the war he returned to Europe for medical studies, and then returned to the United States. He was a general practitioner who practiced in the U.S. all of his life. The "Maurice Goldenhar Family Medicine Update", Stony Brook University Hospital,State
WIDUKIND LENZ
Widukind D. Lenz became known for his early recognition of Thalidomide (German name: Contergan) as the cause of a world-wide epidemic of limb malformation.. From 1937 to 1943 Lenz studied medicine in Tübingen Berlin, Prague and Greifswald. From 1944 to 1948 he served as a physician in various Luftwaffe hospitals and in a prisoner of war campin England.
BÉNÉDICT AUGUSTIN MOREL In 1860 Bénédict Augustin Morel introduced the term dementia praecox to refer to a mental and emotional deterioration beginning at the time of puberty. The disorder was renamed schizophrenia in 1908 by the Swiss psychologist Eugen Bleuler (1857–1939) Morel was born in Vienna to French parents.SHY-DRAGER SYNDROME
George Milton Shy. Glenn Albert Drager. A progressive disorder of the autonomic nervous system in which chronic orthostatic hypotension is associated with bladder and bowel incontinence, Parkinsonism, cerebellar ataxia, impotence, visual troubles, tremor and disturbances of sweating, and muscle wasting leading to severe invalidism.ALOIS ALZHEIMER
Alois Alzheimer was born in the small Bavarian town of Marktbreit, where his father was notary public. He attended the universities of Aschaffenburg, Tübingen, Berlin, and Würzburg, where he was granted a medical degree in 1887. That same year he defended his doctoralthesis, on
ALBERT SÉZARY
Albert Sézary was born in Algiers and studied in Paris. After an outstanding scholastic career he became an interne des hôpitaux d’Alger in 1901. In 1903 he moved to Paris where he became an externe in 1904 and an intern in 1905. He worked with Joseph Jules Dejerine 1849-1917) and Fulgence Raymond (1844-1910) and gained astrong basis in
THOMAS CASPAR GILCHRIST Thomas Caspar Gilchrist studied medicine at the Manchester Royal Infirmary. He left England for America in 1890 and from 1897 he was clinical professor of dermatology at the University of Maryland, from 1898 in the same position at the Johns Hopkins Hospital, Baltimore.NABOTHIAN CYSTS
Martin Naboth. Retention cysts, 1-1,7 mm, in diameter, formed by the nabothian glands at the neck of the uterus, due to occlusion of the lumina of glands in the mucosa of the uterine cervix, causing them to be distended with retained secretion. They always denote that an ectropion has been present.MAURICE GOLDENHAR
Maurice Goldenhar emigrated from Belgium to the United States of America in 1940. After the war he returned to Europe for medical studies, and then returned to the United States. He was a general practitioner who practiced in the U.S. all of his life. The "Maurice Goldenhar Family Medicine Update", Stony Brook University Hospital,State
HENRY HUBERT TURNER
Henry Hubert Turner graduated in medicine from the University of Louisville School of Medicine in 1921. Following postgraduate training in the USA, Vienna and London, he was eventually appointed to the chair of medicine at the University of Oklahoma. One of the founders of modern endocrinology, Turner was involved in the establishment of EDWARD TREACHER COLLINS Edward Treacher Collins was the second son of Dr. William Job Collins (1818-1884), a London physician, and Mary Ann Francisca Treacher (1824-1880) who came from an old Huguenot family. He was given his mother’s maiden name as a forename and, in accordance with the custom of the time, used the doubled-barrelled surname without ahyphen.
WHONAMEDIT?
Whonamedit? is a biographical dictionary of medical eponyms. Disclaimer: Whonamedit? does not give medical advice. This survey of medical eponyms and the persons behind them is PEOPLE LISTED ALPHABETICALLY What is an eponym? An eponym is a word derived from the name of a person, whether real or fictional. A medical eponym is thus any word related to medicine, whose name is derived from a person.LÉON BOUVERET
Léon Bouveret grew up in St-Julien-sur-Reyssouze, a small town 70 km north of Lyon. His father was a physician who trained Leon from early childhood. A gifted child, Léon distinguished himself in high school, where he even won an academic competition in Latin verse. HELENE OLLENDORFF CURTH Helene Ollendorff studied medicine at the universities of Freiburg, Munich and Breslau, After qualifying in 1923 she trained in dermatology at the Rudolf-Virchow-Krankenhaus in Berlin under Abraham Buschke. She became Buschke's assistant subsequently married his other assistant, Wilhelm Curth. The Curths moved to the USA in 1931 and commenced private practice in New York.BAKER'S CYST
William Morrant Baker. Hernia-like cysts in synovial membranes, especially of the knee joints, produced by synovial fluid escaping from a joint through a natural channel or thorugh a hernial opening in the synovial membrane. Limited extension with mild aching and stiffness of knee. Occur at any age, but more frequent in males 15 to30 years of age.
HERMANN RICHNER
Hermann Richner went to school at Davos until 1927 and then a year at Chur. He started his medical studies in Geneva and continued them in Zurich, excepted one semester in Kiel. He graduated 1934 and received his doctor's degree two years later. We thank PatrickBRADLEY'S SYNDROME
An epidemic disease affecting both sexes and with onset at all ages, usually occurring during the winter months and early spring, and beginning in early morning. It is characterized by nausea, sudden and profuse vomiting, anorexia, constipation, pain diarrhoea and, less frequently, constipation, pale stools, headache, generalized aching,and
FRANÇOIS MAURICEAU
François Mauriceau received his first training in obstetrics at the Hôtel-Dieu in his native city of Paris. After qualifying he soon built a large practice in which he gathered experiences that were later laid down in his works. He was an ordinary surgeon and not a doctor of medicine, but his close observations and detailed studies of the foetus, the pregnant uterus, the female pelvis, andEDWARD BACH
Edward Bach grew up in Bermingham, and as a boy is said to have shown a keen concern for human suffering. He worked in his father's brass foundry and observed the loneliness, alienation and apathy that appeared to affect the general health of many of his co-workers. ROBERT DOUGLAS SWEET Douglas Sweet was a consultant dermatologist at the Plymouth and Torbay group of hospitals. He was born in Weybridge, Surrey, but went to school in New Zealand, at Wanganui. He returned to the UK to study at Cambridge and at St Thomas's hospital. He qualified in 1942 and served in the RAMC from 1944 to 1946.WHONAMEDIT?
Whonamedit? is a biographical dictionary of medical eponyms. Disclaimer: Whonamedit? does not give medical advice. This survey of medical eponyms and the persons behind them is PEOPLE LISTED ALPHABETICALLY What is an eponym? An eponym is a word derived from the name of a person, whether real or fictional. A medical eponym is thus any word related to medicine, whose name is derived from a person.LÉON BOUVERET
Léon Bouveret grew up in St-Julien-sur-Reyssouze, a small town 70 km north of Lyon. His father was a physician who trained Leon from early childhood. A gifted child, Léon distinguished himself in high school, where he even won an academic competition in Latin verse. HELENE OLLENDORFF CURTH Helene Ollendorff studied medicine at the universities of Freiburg, Munich and Breslau, After qualifying in 1923 she trained in dermatology at the Rudolf-Virchow-Krankenhaus in Berlin under Abraham Buschke. She became Buschke's assistant subsequently married his other assistant, Wilhelm Curth. The Curths moved to the USA in 1931 and commenced private practice in New York.BAKER'S CYST
William Morrant Baker. Hernia-like cysts in synovial membranes, especially of the knee joints, produced by synovial fluid escaping from a joint through a natural channel or thorugh a hernial opening in the synovial membrane. Limited extension with mild aching and stiffness of knee. Occur at any age, but more frequent in males 15 to30 years of age.
HERMANN RICHNER
Hermann Richner went to school at Davos until 1927 and then a year at Chur. He started his medical studies in Geneva and continued them in Zurich, excepted one semester in Kiel. He graduated 1934 and received his doctor's degree two years later. We thank PatrickBRADLEY'S SYNDROME
An epidemic disease affecting both sexes and with onset at all ages, usually occurring during the winter months and early spring, and beginning in early morning. It is characterized by nausea, sudden and profuse vomiting, anorexia, constipation, pain diarrhoea and, less frequently, constipation, pale stools, headache, generalized aching,and
FRANÇOIS MAURICEAU
François Mauriceau received his first training in obstetrics at the Hôtel-Dieu in his native city of Paris. After qualifying he soon built a large practice in which he gathered experiences that were later laid down in his works. He was an ordinary surgeon and not a doctor of medicine, but his close observations and detailed studies of the foetus, the pregnant uterus, the female pelvis, andEDWARD BACH
Edward Bach grew up in Bermingham, and as a boy is said to have shown a keen concern for human suffering. He worked in his father's brass foundry and observed the loneliness, alienation and apathy that appeared to affect the general health of many of his co-workers. ROBERT DOUGLAS SWEET Douglas Sweet was a consultant dermatologist at the Plymouth and Torbay group of hospitals. He was born in Weybridge, Surrey, but went to school in New Zealand, at Wanganui. He returned to the UK to study at Cambridge and at St Thomas's hospital. He qualified in 1942 and served in the RAMC from 1944 to 1946. EPONYMS LISTED ALPHABETICALLY Whonamedit.com is a biographical dictionary of medical eponyms. It is our ambition to present a complete survey of all medical phenomena named for a person, with a biography of that person. PEOPLE LISTED BY COUNTRY What is an eponym? An eponym is a word derived from the name of a person, whether real or fictional. A medical eponym is thus any word related to medicine, whose name is derived from a person.EDWARD BACH
Edward Bach grew up in Bermingham, and as a boy is said to have shown a keen concern for human suffering. He worked in his father's brass foundry and observed the loneliness, alienation and apathy that appeared to affect the general health of many of his co-workers.FRANÇOIS MAURICEAU
François Mauriceau received his first training in obstetrics at the Hôtel-Dieu in his native city of Paris. After qualifying he soon built a large practice in which he gathered experiences that were later laid down in his works. He was an ordinary surgeon and not a doctor of medicine, but his close observations and detailed studies of the foetus, the pregnant uterus, the female pelvis, andWIDUKIND LENZ
Widukind D. Lenz became known for his early recognition of Thalidomide (German name: Contergan) as the cause of a world-wide epidemic of limb malformation.. From 1937 to 1943 Lenz studied medicine in Tübingen Berlin, Prague and Greifswald. From 1944 to 1948 he served as a physician in various Luftwaffe hospitals and in a prisoner of war campin England.
BÉNÉDICT AUGUSTIN MOREL In 1860 Bénédict Augustin Morel introduced the term dementia praecox to refer to a mental and emotional deterioration beginning at the time of puberty. The disorder was renamed schizophrenia in 1908 by the Swiss psychologist Eugen Bleuler (1857–1939) Morel was born in Vienna to French parents.FERMI'S VACCINE
Bibliography. C. Fermi: Über die Immunisierung gegen Wutkrankheit. Zeitschrift für Hygiene und Infektionskrankheiten, 1908, 58: 233-276. Eine sehr kurze vorläufige Mitteilung wurde im Jahre 1905 in der Riforma medica, Jahrgang XXI, Nr.GEORGE COATS
George Coats began his medical studies at Glasgow University in 1892, graduated in 1897 and received his doctorate there in 1901. He was a resident at the Royal Western and Eye Infirmaries in Glasgow, and continued his studies in ophthalmology in Vienna, visiting Munich, Freiburg and Zurich. THOMAS CASPAR GILCHRIST Thomas Caspar Gilchrist studied medicine at the Manchester Royal Infirmary. He left England for America in 1890 and from 1897 he was clinical professor of dermatology at the University of Maryland, from 1898 in the same position at the Johns Hopkins Hospital, Baltimore. In 1907 the University of Maryland conferred on him an honorary M.D.MAURICE GOLDENHAR
Maurice Goldenhar emigrated from Belgium to the United States of America in 1940. After the war he returned to Europe for medical studies, and then returned to the United States. He was a general practitioner who practiced in the U.S. all of his life. The "Maurice Goldenhar Family Medicine Update", Stony Brook University Hospital,State
Whonamedit?
- A dictionary of medical eponymsON THIS DAY
JEAN-MARTIN CHARCOT
French neurologist, born November 29, 1825 Paris; died August 16, 1893, Lac des Settons, Nièvre. Read more MARTIN WILLIAM FLACK British physiologist, born March 20, 1882, Borden, Kent; died August 16, 1931, Halton, England. Read moreFEATURED PERSON
JONAS EDWARD SALK
American medical scientist, born October 28, 1914, New York City; died June 23, 1995, La Jolla, California. Read moreNEWEST PEOPLE
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NEWEST EPONYMS
* Rolandic vein occlusion syndrome * Rolando's gelatinous substance* Rolando's fissure
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* List people by country * List people alphabetically * List eponyms alphabetically * List all women alphabeticallyWHAT IS AN EPONYM?
An eponym is a word derived from the name of a person, whether real or fictional. A medical eponym is thus any word related to medicine, whose name is derived from a person.WHAT IS WHONAMEDIT?
Whonamedit.com is a biographical dictionary of medical eponyms. It is our ambition to present a complete survey of all medical phenomena named for a person, with a biography of that person.DISCLAIMER:
_Whonamedit? does not give medical advice._ This survey of medical eponyms and the persons behind them is meant as a general interest site only. No information found here must under any circumstances be used for medical purposes, diagnostically, therapeutically or otherwise. If you, or anybody close to you, is affected, or believe to be affected, by any condition mentioned here:see a doctor.
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