Gottfried Dominok

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Gottfried Dominok

Gottfried Dominok (born January 18, 1932 in Königshütte , Upper Silesia , † July 25, 2010 in Cottbus ) was a German pathologist . He set up Germany's first registry for bone tumors in Dresden / Cottbus .

Life

Dominok studied medicine in Leningrad from 1952 at the 1st Medical Academy and at the Karl Marx University in Leipzig . He was licensed as a doctor in 1957 and received a Dr. med. PhD . He completed his training as a specialist in pathological anatomy at the Charité .

In 1962 he went to the Medical Academy in Dresden as a senior physician and completed his habilitation in 1965. Since 1966, he has been a lecturer and has been in charge of the bone tumor registry that was established with clinicians and radiologists in the same year. On September 1, 1972 he was O.ö. Professor of Pathological Anatomy. In 1973 he was one of the founders of the Working Group for Bone Tumors in Heidelberg. He was a founding member and chairman of the Society for Osteology of the GDR and General Secretary of the European Society for Osteo-Arthrology .

When he became director of the Pathological Institute in the Cottbus District Hospital in 1975 , the bone tumor registry moved to nearby Bagenz . The Information Technology was in Dresden by Hans-Georg Knoch continued. In Cottbus, Dominok found substantial support from the oral surgeon Klaus Pape . After the fall of the Wall , Dominok became a member of the German Society for Pathology . In 1992 he founded a doctor's practice in Cottbus .

Works

Honors

literature

  • Jörg Frege: Gottfried W. Dominok . Der Pathologe 31 (2010), p. 324.
  • Klaus Pape: On the death of Prof. Dr. med. habil. Gottfried Dominok . Osteologie 4 (2010), p. 377.

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Dissertation: To determine age and sex on the morphology of the human skullcap .
  2. a b c d Jörg Frege: Obituary for Dominok . doi : 10.1007 / s00292-010-1388-9
  3. Habilitation thesis: The age-related structural remodeling of human bones (fine tissue examinations on over 1,600 human bones) .
  4. Klaus Pape (DÄB)