Gewählte Publikation:
SHR
Neuro
Krebs
Kardio
Lipid
Stoffw
Microb
Pickel, H; Reich, O; Winter, R; Young, RH.
Hermann Lebert (1813-1878): a pioneer of diagnostic pathology.
VIRCHOWS ARCHIV. 2009; 455(3): 301-305.
Doi: 10.1007/s00428-009-0820-0
[OPEN ACCESS]
Web of Science
PubMed
FullText
FullText_MUG
- Co-Autor*innen der Med Uni Graz
-
Reich Olaf
-
Winter Raimund
- Altmetrics:
- Dimensions Citations:
- Plum Analytics:
- Scite (citation analytics):
- Abstract:
- Hermann Lebert (1813-1879) was a pioneer of diagnostic pathology and medical iconography. He was born in Breslau, then Prussia, and died in Nice (France). He lived in Switzerland as a general physician, in France as a pathologist, and eventually became the chairman for internal medicine in Zurich and Breslau, respectively. The significance of Hermann Lebert for medical posterity has three aspects: firstly, scientific linking of the French (Parisian) school and its distinctive clinical/practical orientation to the later clinical/pathological German school of Johann Lukas Schönlein, Johannes Müller, and Rudolf Virchow; secondly, his pioneering of the diagnostic use of the microscope in pathological anatomy; and finally, his remarkable book, Traité d'anatomie pathologique générale et spéciale, which has almost fallen into oblivion, being unknown to most contemporary workers.
- Find related publications in this database (using NLM MeSH Indexing)
-
History, 19th Century -
-
Humans -
-
Pathology -
-
Poland -
- Find related publications in this database (Keywords)
-
Pathologist
-
Microscopy
-
Cytology
-
Pathologic atlas