Wilhelm Krause
Johann Friedrich Wilhelm Krause (12 July 1833 – 4 February 1910) was a German anatomist born in Hanover. He was the son of anatomist Karl Friedrich Theodor Krause (1797-1868).
Krause studied at Göttingen, where he became member of the Burschenschaft Hannovera (fraternity).[citation needed] He earned his medical doctorate in 1854 and became an associate professor at the University of Göttingenin 1860. In 1892 he was appointed head of the Anatomical Institute Laboratory in Berlin.[citation needed]
Krause discovered and described mechanoreceptors that were to become known as "Krause's corpuscles", sometimes referred to as "Krause's end-bulbs".[citation needed] His name is also associated with:
- "Krause's membranes": defined as isotropic bands in striated muscle fiber that consist of disks of sarcoplasm and connect the individual fibrils. Also known as Z-Disc or Dobie's line.
- "Krause respiratory bundle": a fiber bundle that is also known as the "solitary tract".[1] Sometimes referred to as "Gierke respiratory bundle", named in honor of anatomist Hans Paul Bernhard Gierke.[2]
Krause also researched in the field of embryology. Among his students at Göttingen was bacteriologist Robert Koch (1843-1910).[citation needed] Krause is credited with the publication of over 100 medical articles.
Written works
[edit]- Die terminalen Körperchen der einfach sensiblen Nerven. Hannover, (Treatise on Krause's corpuscles), 1860
- Anatomische Untersuchungen, 1861.
- Die Trichinenkrankheit und ihre Verhütung
- Uber die Nervenendigung in der Geschlectsorganen, 1866.
- Ueber die Allantois des Menschen, 1875.
- Handbuch der menschlichen Anatomie. (Third edition of his father's work) 3 volumes; Hanover, 1876, 1879, 1880.
- Die Anatomie des Kaninchens, publisher: Leipzig: Engelmann, 1884.
References
[edit]- ^ Stedman's Medical Eponyms by Thomas Lathrop Stedman
- ^ Stedman's Medical Eponyms by Thomas Lathrop Stedman; Lippincott Williams & Wilkins, 2005 - Medical - 899 pages