Heinrich Jacobson

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Heinrich Jacobson (born October 27, 1826 in Königsberg i. Pr. , † December 10, 1890 in Berlin ) was a German doctor.

His father, Ludwig Jacobson (1795–1841), an assistant to the surgeon Karl Unger , was denied the desired academic career. However, he founded and headed the orthopedic institute in Königsberg.

Heinrich Jacobson studied at the universities in Heidelberg, Berlin, Prague under Krukenberg, Volkmann senior, Oppolzer, Pfeufer and in Halle, where he obtained his doctorate in 1847 with the dissertation Quaestiones de vi nervorum vagorum in cordis motus .

He settled in Königsberg as a doctor and became a private lecturer at the university there and, in 1872, an assistant professor. In the same year he was elected chief physician of the inner ward of the Jewish Hospital Berlin . The outstanding clinician established a reputation as a researcher mainly through his work on experimental pathology.

His sons, Louis (* 1852) and Paul Heinrich Jacobson , also became physicians.

Publications

  • Contributions to hemodynamics ; 1860-62
  • About the movement of blood in the veins ; 1866
  • About normal and pathological local temperature ; 1870
  • About the heart murmurs
  • About the blood pressure in compressed air

supporting documents

  1. http://www.jewishencyclopedia.com/view.jsp?letter=J&artid=119#ixzz1T80XI2BG
  2. ^ Julius Pagel:  Jacobson, Heinrich . In: Allgemeine Deutsche Biographie (ADB). Volume 50, Duncker & Humblot, Leipzig 1905, p. 611 f.
  3. http://www.zeno.org/Pagel-1901/A/Jacobson,+Heinrich