Johann Eberhard Nebelthau

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Johann Eberhard Nebelthau (born September 14, 1864 in Bremen , † June 23, 1914 in Bremen) was a German physiologist and university professor.

Life

After graduating from high school in Bremen in 1884, Johann Eberhard Nebelthau studied medicine at the universities of Bonn, Marburg, Berlin and Strasbourg. In Bonn he joined the Corps Hansea in 1885 . In 1888 he was promoted to Dr. med. PhD. In 1889 he received his medical license in Strasbourg and went as an assistant doctor to the university clinic in Marburg and worked physiologically in the laboratories of Eduard Külz, Max Rubner and Albrecht Kossel . In 1894 he qualified as a professor in internal medicine in Marburg. In 1895 he became a senior physician at the Marburg University Clinic. In 1898 he was appointed associate professor at the University of Marburg. In 1900 he moved to the medical polyclinic of the University of Halle, initially as senior physician and associate professor and from 1904 as director of the polyclinic. In 1906 he resigned from the management of the clinic due to a nervous problem.

Together with the Leitz company , Nebelthau developed a sled microscope for microscopic observation of brain slices, the so-called sled microscope for brain slices according to E. Nebelthau .

Fonts

  • Does lactic acid appear in the urine of cold-blooded animals after the liver has been switched off? , 1888
  • On glycogen formation in the liver , 1892
  • Calorimetric studies on starving rabbits in a fever-free and febrile state , 1894
  • About the mode of action of some aromatic amides and how they are influenced by the introduction of the methyl and ethyl groups , 1895
  • Microscope and magnifying glass for viewing large sections , 1896
  • Brain sections to explain the fiber orientation 1898
  • Contribution to the doctrine of hematoporphyrin in urine , 1899

literature

  • Pagel: Biographical lexicon of outstanding doctors of the nineteenth century . Berlin, Vienna 1901, Sp. 1192. ( Permalink )

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Kösener Corpslisten 1960, 11 , 278