Gustav von Bergmann
Gustav von Bergmann | |
---|---|
Born | 24 December 1878 |
Died | 16 September 1955 |
Citizenship | German |
Occupation | Internist |
Gustav von Bergmann (24 December 1878 – 16 September 1955) was a German internist born in Würzburg. He was the son of renowned surgeon Ernst von Bergmann (1836–1907).
Education
In 1903 he received his doctorate at Strasbourg, and afterwards worked at the second medical hospital in Berlin under Friedrich Kraus. In 1916 he became a full professor of internal medicine in Marburg, and later a professor at Frankfurt am Main (from 1920), the Berlin Charité (from 1927) and Munich (from 1946).
Career
He was a proponent of "functional pathology", and is considered to be one of the founders of psychosomatic medicine. His research involved investigations into gastro-intestinal ulcers, hypertension and studies of the autonomic nervous system. From 1994 to 2010, the Gustav-von-Bergmann-Medaille was the highest honor awarded by the German Society of Internal Medicine.[1]
With Albrecht Bethe and Gustav Georg Embden, he was co-publisher of the multi-volume Handbuch der normalen und pathologischen Physiologie. With Rudolf Stähelin, he published the second edition of Handbuch der inneren Medizin.[2] Other noted works of his include:
- Das vegetative Nervensystem und seine Störungen (The autonomic nervous system and its disorders). 1926.
- Funktionelle Pathologie (Functional pathology), 1932.
- Neues Denken in der Medizin (New reasoning in medicine), 1947.
He attended to physiologist Emil von Behring during the night prior to Behring's death of a pulmonary inflammation on March 31, 1917.[2]
References
- ^ Deutsche Gesellschaft für Innere Medizin Gustav-von-Bergmann-Medaille
- ^ a b Gustav von Bergmann, Who Named It
- 1878 births
- 1955 deaths
- German internists
- Physicians from Würzburg
- Physicians from the Kingdom of Bavaria
- Academic staff of the Humboldt University of Berlin
- Academic staff of the University of Marburg
- Academic staff of Goethe University Frankfurt
- Academic staff of the Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich
- Members of the German Academy of Sciences at Berlin
- Physicians of the Charité
- German medical biography stubs