Ferdinand Dieterich

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Ferdinand Dieterich (born November 8, 1928 in Blankenburg (Harz) , † July 23, 2006 in Leipzig ) was a German university professor , surgeon and urologist .

Career

Dieterich was born the son of a carpenter in Blankenburg. After primary school he went to high school in 1938, where he graduated from high school in 1946. He then completed a one-year nursing internship at the University Clinic in Halle (Saale) in order to study human medicine in Halle immediately afterwards. In 1954 he finished his studies with his dissertation "Do repeated persiston N infusions inhibit the formation of antibodies after typhoid immunization?" Dieterich completed his training as a surgeon in Bad Salzungen and in Erfurt at the Medical Academy . In Erfurt he devoted himself increasingly to the field of urology. In 1960 he became a specialist in urology and in 1964 a specialist in surgery. In 1970 he was on the topic "Application of cryosurgery in urology" habilitated and in 1972 appointed full university lecturers at the Medical Academy Erfurt. Two years later, Dieterich accepted a call to the University of Leipzig, where he received the chair of urology. In 1975 he founded the Leipzig University Urological Clinic. In 1996 Dieterich retired . His successor was his former student Wolfgang Dorschner .

plant

The main focus of Dieterich's work was in the field of cryosurgery and the operative therapy of hormone-related diseases, such as feminizing sculptures of the intersexual genitals. He is the author or co-author of over 450 publications.

literature

  • Professor Ferdinand Dieterich has passed away. In: Der Urologe A. Volume 45, Number 9, 2006, pp. 1202-1215. doi : 10.1007 / s00120-006-1180-x
  • F. Houses (Ed.): History of the University of Leipzig, 1409–2009: Faculties, institutes, central institutions. Leipziger Universitätsverlag, 2009, ISBN 3-86583-304-7 , p. 1015.
  • Dieterich, Ferdinand (1972): Feminine sculptures. In: U. Nitschke, F. Dieterich: Intersexuality. Urologische Operationslehre, delivery 9. Leipzig: Thieme, 1972. (pp. 165–180).

Individual evidence

  1. a b Obituary for Prof. Dr. med. habil. Ferdinand Dieterich. (PDF; 51 kB) In: Ärzteblatt Sachsen. Volume 9, 2006, p. 492.
  2. ^ JU Stolzenburg: Obituary for Prof. Dr. med. habil. Wolfgang Dorschner. (PDF; 399 kB) In: Ärzteblatt Sachsen. Volume 5, 2005, p. 232.

Web links