Franz Bender (doctor)

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Franz Bender (born January 13, 1922 in Ahlen , † July 8, 1994 near Münster ) was a German doctor and university professor .

Life

After attending grammar school, where he graduated from high school in 1940, Franz Bender studied medicine at the Universities of Münster and Königsberg . At the end of the Second World War he was drafted into the Wehrmacht and used as a medical soldier. He was critically wounded on the Eastern Front in 1944. After the war he returned to the University of Münster . There he received his doctorate in 1949, Dr. med. The topic of his dissertation was capillary microscopic examinations of the vasolability of skin tuberculous . During this time he began his work at the Medical University Clinic in Münster, then moved to the Psychological Institute in Marburg and then to the Mayo Clinic in Rochester , USA. When he returned to Münster, he became a senior physician in 1961 and last worked at the Medical Clinic and Polyclinic, Department of Internal Medicine C.

In 1959 Franz Bender became a private lecturer in internal medicine at the University of Münster. There he was appointed associate professor in 1965 , before he was appointed full professor of cardiology in Münster from 1971 .

Franz Bender was President of the Conference of the German Society for Cardiology in 1980 and 1986 . As a cardiologist, he specialized in cardiac arrhythmias .

He died at the age of 72 during a bicycle trip that he undertook among colleagues at his previous job in Münster.

Fonts (selection)

  • with Gustav Beiz: Therapy of cardiac arrhythmias with Verapamil (Isoptin) (= Gustav Fischer pocket books). 1974, ISBN 3-437-10306-7
  • with Hans-Werner Klempft: textbook and atlas of dye thinning technology (= contributions to cardiology and angiology, vol. 25). Steinkopff, Darmstadt 1978, ISBN 3-7985-0495-4

literature

  • B. Lüderitz, G. Arnold: 75 years old: German Society for Cardiology - Heart and Circulatory Research , 2011, p. 247 (with portrait photo), ISBN 3-540-41431-2

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. ^ B. Lüderitz, G. Arnold: 75 years: German Society for Cardiology - Heart and Circulatory Research , 2011, p. 247.