Alexander Filippowitsch Samoilow

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Alexander Filippowitsch Samoilow ( Russian Александр Филиппович Самойлов ; born March 27, 1867 in Odessa , † July 22, 1930 in Moscow ) was a Russian physiologist and cardiologist .

Alexander Samoilov finished his studies at the Imperial University of Dorpat in 1892 as a doctor of medicine. From 1892 he worked at the Institute for Experimental Medicine in St. Petersburg , headed by Ivan Pavlov , until he followed a call from Ivan Setschenow to Moscow in 1894 .

In 1903 he became a professor at the University of Kazan and in 1924 at Moscow University . He is considered the founder of Russian electrophysiology and co-founder of electrocardiography . In 1930 he was awarded the Lenin Prize.

His grave is in the Vvedenskoye Cemetery in the old Moscow district of Lefortovo .

Works in German

  • About the maximum tetanus of the striated muscles . - "Arch. for Anat. and Physiolog. ”, 1898.
  • About the actual electromotive force of the muscular demarcation current . - "Arch. for d. total Physiology ”, 1899.
  • Contributions to the electrophysiology of the heart . - "Arch. f. Anat. U. Physiol. ”, 1906.

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Leonid Makarov: Alexander Samoylov - Founding father of Russian electrophysiology, Cardiology Journal 2010, Vol. 17, No. 5 (pdf)
  2. BI Kochelaev, YV Yablokov: The Beginning of Paramagnetic Resonance, 1995 (Google Books partial digitization)