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Hermann Johannes Pfannenstiel

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Hermann Johannes Pfannenstiel (1862-1909)

Hermann Johannes Pfannenstiel (June 28, 1862 – July 3, 1909) was a German gynecologist born in Berlin.

In 1885 he received his doctorate in Berlin and afterwards worked as a hospital assistant in Posen. He later moved to Breslau, where in 1896 he became an associate professor. In 1902 he was appointed chair of the department of obstetrics and gynecology at the University of Giessen, and five years later, he attained a similar position at the University of Kiel.[1]

From 1891 he was secretary of the German Society for Gynaecology (Deutsche Gesellschaft für Gynäkologie). Beginning in 1896, he was co-editor of the Archives of Gynaecology (Archiv für Gynäkologie).[2]

Among his better known publications were works on ovarian pathology, uterine tumors and the formation of carcinomas following ovariotomy.[3] In 1908 he was the first physician to give a comprehensive description of familial icterus gravis neonatorum.[4]

Pfannenstiel is best remembered for the eponymous "Pfannenstiel's incision", a transverse incision used in genitourinary surgery that is still widely used today. He published his paper in 1900 when he described 51 cases.[5] His intent was to decrease the risk of an incisional hernia; results also proved to be cosmetically better.[6]

On July 3, 1909 at the age of 47, Pfannenstiel died from septicemia after having injured his finger during surgery for an tubo-ovarian abscess.[6] He was the father of Wilhelm Pfannenstiel. Pfannenstiel married his wife Elisabeth Behlendorff in 1889.

References

  1. ^ Pfannenstiel, Hermann Johannes @ NDB/ADB Deutsche Biographie
  2. ^ NCBI; Hermann Johannes Pfannenstiel (1862-1090). On the 80th anniversary of his death. A biography of a famous German gynecologist Geburtshilfe Frauenheilkd. 1990 Apr;50(4):326-34.
  3. ^ Hans Hermann Johannes Pfannenstiel @ Who Named It
  4. ^ Kernicterus by David W. McCandless
  5. ^ Pfannenstiel HJ (On the advantages of the symphyseal transverse fascial incision for gynecological caliotomies as well as the contribution to the surgical indications) Samml Klin Vortr (1900) 268:1735-56
  6. ^ a b Powell JL. Powell's Pearls: Pfannenstiel and Torpin. ACOG Clinical Review (2008) 13:4:12-13 ISSN 1085-6862


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