Dietrich Krause (veterinarian, 1920)

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Dietrich Gustav Ernst Krause (born June 13, 1920 in Hanover ) is a former German veterinarian .

Life

Dietrich Krause was born as the son of the architect Kurt Krause. In the summer semester of 1938 he began studying at the University of Veterinary Medicine in Hanover and became a member of the Corps Normannia Hanover . He received his veterinary license in the winter semester of 1941/42. In October 1942 he became an assistant at the Pharmacological Institute of the University of Veterinary Medicine in Hanover. From February 1944 he did military service in the Wehrmacht as a reserve veterinarian. After the end of the war, he continued his assistantship at the Pharmacological Institute in Hanover, where he received his Dr. med. vet. received his doctorate. There he completed his habilitation as the second veterinarian in the history of the institute in 1950 to become Dr. med. vet. habil. In the following years he was a private lecturer in pharmacology. In April 1956 he was appointed associate professor at the University of Veterinary Medicine in Hanover.

Krause worked on the pharmacology of the autonomic nervous system. He was a co-author of the textbook of general therapy for veterinarians .

Fonts

  • Circulatory effects of Pervitin , 1946
  • On the mechanism of the vasodilating effect of adrenaline , 1950
  • Textbook on general therapy for veterinarians , 7th revised and expanded edition, 1952 (together with Eugen Fröhner and Richard Völker)

literature

  • Fritz Riggert, Otto Gervesmann: History of the Corps Normannia Hannover, 1859, March 15, 1959, 1959, p. 195.
  • Krause, Dietrich . In: Kürschner's German Scholars Calendar 1961 . 9th edition. Volume I: A - N, p. 1075

Individual evidence

  1. a b History of the Institute for Pharmacology at www.tiho-hannover.de