Roderich Stintzing

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Georg Hieronymus Roderich Stintzing

Georg Hieronymus Roderich Stintzing (born February 12, 1854 in Heidelberg , † April 5, 1933 in Jena ) was a German physician.

Life

Georg Hieronymus Roderich was the son of law professor Roderich von Stintzing (* February 8, 1825 in Altona; † September 13, 1883 in Oberstdorf) and his wife Franziska Bokelmann, who was married on May 1, 1850 in Altona (* May 25, 1828 in Flottbek; † November 7, 1908 in Leipzig). He received his basic training at grammar schools in Erlangen and Bonn . He completed studies in medical sciences at the University of Bonn , the University of Tübingen and the University of Leipzig . Since the summer semester of 1877 he was a member of the student association AV Igel Tübingen . In 1878 he passed his medical exam and obtained his doctorate in medicine in Bonn with a thesis on the mechanics of physiological carbon dioxide formation . From 1878 he worked as an assistant to Eduard Pflüger at the Institute for Physiology in Bonn, had become Hugo von Ziemssen's assistant at the medical clinic in Munich in 1880 and completed his habilitation in 1883 at the University of Munich for internal medicine.

On April 15, 1890, he became associate professor of internal medicine at the University of Jena and director of the medical polyclinic. On April 1, 1892, he was appointed full professor of pathology and therapy, and with that he became head of the university clinic in Jena and the laboratory for experimental pathology connected to it. In addition, he received the title of secret medical council and was rector of the Salana in the winter semester of 1902 . During his period of activity as a university lecturer, he became President of the General Medical Association of Thuringia, was an honorary member of the German Society for Internal Medicine and in 1894 became a member of the Academy of Nonprofit Sciences in Erfurt . In music, Stintzing had found a good balance to his scientific work, which is also expressed in his senior membership of the academic concert commission in Jena and in the preparation for Max Reger's honorary doctorate .

In 1924 he retired from his professorship, but remained active in the field of medical publications until his death on April 5, 1933.

The "stintzing tables" , which contain the average values ​​of the normal electrical excitability of almost all muscles and nerves, were named after him. Together with Franz Penzoldt , he published the handbook of the entire therapy (6th vol. 1894–1896, 1926–1928 in 7 vol.).

family

Strinzing was married twice. His first marriage was on October 5, 1884 in Bonn with Hanna Rühle (born June 20, 1861 in Greifswald, † February 24, 1897 in Wahlheiden), the daughter of the secret medical councilor and professor in Bonn, Hugo Ernst Heinrich Rühle . His second marriage was on March 29, 1904 in Jena with Gertrud Keferstein (Kieferstein), the daughter of Dr. phil. Horst Gustav Heinrich Keferstein (born August 12, 1828 in Jena, † April 25, 1907 ibid.) And his wife Ottilie Spengler (born March 2, 1833 in Braunsdorf near Borna, † October 6, 1910 in Jena). There are children from the first marriage. We know of these:

  • Roderich Stintzing (born November 7, 1885 in Munich; † October 21, 1964 in Uppsala / Sweden) m. June 3, 1914 in Stockholm with Gertrud Wilke
  • Dora Stintzing (born December 1, 1886 in Munich, † January 21, 1952 in Jena)
  • Hugo Stintzing (born August 10, 1888 in Munich, † December 11, 1970 in Darmstadt) married. I. on November 1, 1915 Marie Bürger; mated II. On October 15, 1929 in Gundorf with Frieda Keferstein
  • Franziska Stintzing (born September 16, 1889 Munich, † February 26, 1970 Jena) became a pastor
  • Erna Stintzing (born April 24, 1894 in Jena; † March 3, 1978 in Esslingen) became a nurse, married. May 12, 1921 in Jena with Kurt Gutzeit

Works (selection)

  • Investigations into the mechanics of physiological carbonic acid formation. Bonn 1878
  • The Electro-Medicin in the international electricity exhibition in Munich in 1882. Munich 1883
  • About nerve stretching. Leipzig 1883
  • Clinical observations from the 2nd medical clinic of the chief medical officer Prof. von Ziemssen. Munich 1884
  • Contribution to the use of arsenic in chronic lung diseases, 1883
  • About the electrical resistance of the human body. Munich 1886
  • The varieties of the degenerative reaction and their diagnostic-prognostic significance. In: German archive for clinical medicine. Leipzig 1886
  • About hereditary ataxia. In: Munich medical newsreel; Born in 1887
  • The congenital and acquired defect of the chest muscles, at the same time a clinical contribution to progressive muscular atrophy. In: German Archive for Clinical Medicin. 1888
  • Hugo Rühle. In: Münchner Medizinischer Wochenschrift; Born in 1888, No. 35
  • Via the gastric mucosa in secondary diseases of the stomach. Meeting of the Society for Morphology and Physiology; (Munich): 1889.12.03
  • About the present state of diagnosis of gastric diseases. In: Münchner Medizinischer Wochenschrift. Born in 1889, No. 8 and 9
  • About electrodiagnostic methods. In: Negotiations of the 5th Congress for Internal Medicine. (1890)
  • On the structure of the diseased gastric mucosa. In: Münchner Medizinischer Wochenschrift. Born 1889, No. 48
  • A clinical contribution to the influenza epidemic. In: Münchner Medizinischer Wochenschrift. Born in 1890, No. 6 and 7
  • About the absolute measurement of faradic currents in humans. Leipzig 1890
  • About the causal link between heart disease and epilepsy. In: German Archive for Clinical Medicine. Vol. 66
  • General prophylaxis and dietetics of diseases of the nervous system. In: Handbook of the special therapy of internal diseases. Jena 1890, Abth. 8, pp. 1-42.
  • About tuberculin effects in a diagnostic and therapeutic relationship. In: Münchner Medizinischer Wochenschrift. Born in 1891
  • For hematological diagnostics. In: Diagnostic Lexicon for General Practitioners. Vienna & Leipzig, 1892
  • About urogenital tuberculosis. In: Correspondence sheet of the General Medical Association of Thuringia. 1892, no.8
  • Treatment of diseases of the pleura and middle pleura. In: Handbook of the special therapy of internal diseases. Jena 1894
  • Sleep and insomnia. Erfurt 1898, also in: Yearbooks of the Royal Academy of Charitable Sciences in Erfurt; NF, issue 24
  • On the structure of the gastric mucosa. In: Festschrift for the seventieth birthday of Carl von Kupffer. 1899
  • Treatment of diseases of the spinal cord and its skins. Jena 1903
  • General prophylaxis and dietetics of diseases of the nervous system. Jena 1903
  • Some mechanical surgical treatments for diseases of the nervous system. Jena 1903
  • General balneotherapy and climatic therapy for diseases of the nervous system. Jena 1903
  • Seasickness treatment. Jena 1903
  • General prophylaxis and dietetics of diseases of the nervous system. Jena 1926
  • Max Matthes. Munich 1930, also in: Munich medical weekly. 1930, 18

literature

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