Arnold Hiller

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Arnold Emil August Hiller (born December 22, 1847 in Seehausen (Altmark) , † March 4, 1919 in Zehlendorf near Berlin ) was a German medical officer and bacteriologist.

Life

As the youngest son of a district physician and medical adviser, Hiller attended the Medical and Surgical Friedrich Wilhelm Institute in Berlin. In 1868 he became a member of the Corps Suevo-Borussia . His teachers were Rudolf Virchow and Ludwig Traube , later Ernst von Leyden . Received his doctorate in 1871 , he was an assistant at Leyden's clinic in Berlin from 1880 to 1882. There since 1883 habilitated lecturer for internal medicine , he was the following year as a staff and battalion doctor after Breslau added, and in 1884 at the Silesian Friedrich-Wilhelms University umhabilitiert . In 1890 he resigned as a military doctor, but in 1898 he was appointed senior staff doctor z. D. and appointed director of the collections at the Kaiser-Wilhelms-Akademie for military medical education in Berlin. He died in 1919 as a university professor.

Monographs

  • The doctrine of putrefaction , Berlin 1879.
  • Heat stroke and sunstroke, according to the current state of science . Leipzig 1917.

Publications

  • Severe ileotyphus, complication with icterus and pneumonia duplex, death before the end of the first stage. In: Charité-Annalen 7 (1882), pp. 316-318.
  • Ileotyphus with anesthesia, possibly due to simultaneous diphtheric infection. In: Charité-Annalen 7 (1882), pp. 318–321.
  • Deep and persistent sopor as the main symptom of a mildly progressing ileotype. In: Charité-Annalen 7 (1882), pp. 321–322.
  • Slight absorptive ileotyphus with severe symptoms of collapse. In: Charité-Annalen 7 (1882), pp. 322–323.
  • Polyarthritis chronica after dysentery. In: Charité-Annalen 7 (1882), pp. 323-324.
  • Chronic dysentery; acute diffuse peritonitis; Death. In: Charité-Annalen 7 (1882), pp. 324-325.
  • Scarlatina; multiple synovitis with rheumatic polyarthritis; at the same time endocarditis with leaving behind a valve defect. In: Charité-Annalen 7 (1882), pp. 325–327.
  • Acute hemorrhagic nephritis with fatal outcome, immediately following erysipelas migrans. In: Charité-Annalen 7 (1882), pp. 327–329.
  • Two cases of desquamative nephritis in the course of a puerperium disturbed by septic infection. In: Charité-Annalen 7 (1882), pp. 329-332.
  • Acute symmetrical erythema papulosum on the hands and feet due to septic infection. In: Charité-Annalen 7 (1882), pp. 332–333.
  • Two cases of "pregnancy kidney" and related eclampsia. In: Charité-Annalen 7 (1882), pp. 333–338.
  • Deep nutritional and developmental disorders following chlorosis, probably due to congenital uterine atrophy. In: Charité-Annalen 7 (1882), pp. 338–341.
  • Chronic icterus; 2 years later anemia perniciosa and death. In: Charité-Annalen 7 (1882), pp. 341–343.
  • Progressive muscular atrophy with an atrophic course. In: Charité-Annalen 7 (1882), pp. 343-344.
  • Case of multiple neuritis (Leyden), nerve distension. In: Charité-Annalen 7 (1882), pp. 344–347.
  • Inspirational screaming fit, hysteria. In: Charité-Annalen 7 (1882), pp. 347-348.
  • Severe arthritis deformans in adolescence. In: Charité-Annalen 7 (1882), pp. 348-349.
  • Two cases of pulmonary syphilis. In: Charité-Annalen 7 (1882), pp. 349-350.
  • About sudden deaths in the convalescence of ileotyphus. In: Charité-Annalen 8 (1883), pp. 178-223.
  • About pulmonary syphilis and syphilitic phthisis. In: Charité-Annalen 9 (1884), pp. 184–282.

literature

  • Hiller, Arnold In: Julius Pagel : Biographical Lexicon of Outstanding Doctors of the Nineteenth Century. Urban & Schwarzenberg, Berlin and Vienna 1901, pp. 738–739.

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Death register of the Zehlendorf registry office No. 60/1919.
  2. a b Kösener Corpslisten 1930, 61/21