Christian Magnus Falsen Sinding-Larsen

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Christian Magnus Falsen Sinding-Larsen (born April 17, 1866 in Christiania, now Oslo , † February 12, 1930 in Oslo) was a Norwegian doctor. He is the first person to describe Larsen-Johansson disease (Sinding-Larsen-Johansson's disease).

Live and act

He was the son of the journalist Alfred Sinding-Larsen (1839-1911) and Elisabeth Lange (1842-1887). His brothers were the officer Birger Fredrik Sinding-Larsen (1867-1941), the architect Holger Sinding-Larsen (1869-1938) and the painter Kristofer Sinding-Larsen (1873-1948). The journalist Henning Sinding-Larsen (1904–1994) was his nephew.

Sinding-Larsen completed his medical studies in Oslo in 1891 and then worked as an assistant doctor in the Rikshospitalet in Oslo. In 1892 he became an assistant doctor and later a senior physician at Kysthospitalet in Stavern. In 1907, he was with a paper on the tubercular coxitis doctorate . In 1911 he was appointed director of the Rikshospitalet. He held this position until his death in 1930.

From 1917 to 1922 he was Vice President of the Norwegian Red Cross ( Norges Røde Kors ).

Sinding-Larsen described 1921 later for him and the Swedish doctor Sven Christian Johansson called patellar tendinitis , an aseptic osteochondrosis of the kneecap ( patella ). His clinical and scientific interest was particularly in childhood tuberculosis and its therapy.

Individual evidence

  1. ^ A b c Christian Magnus Sinding-Larsen . In: Store norske leksikon . Retrieved March 8, 2013.
  2. CMF Sinding-Larsen: Contribution to the study of the treatment of hip joint tuberculosis in childhood. In: Nordisk medicinskt arkiv . 1905/1906.
  3. CMF Sinding-Larsen: En hittil ukjendt sygdom i patella. In: Norsk Magazin for Lægevidenskaben . 1921, No. 84, pp. 161-166.
  4. ^ CMF Sinding-Larsen: A hitherto unknown affection of the patella in children. In: Acta Radiologica . 1921, No. 1, pp. 171-173.