Eduard Heinrich Henoch

Eduard Heinrich Henoch.

Eduard Heinrich Henoch (June 16, 1820, Berlin August 26, 1910) was a German physician. He taught at the Berlin University (18681894). Henoch was of Jewish descent, and was the nephew of Moritz Heinrich Romberg.[1]

Work

After taking the degree of M.D. at Berlin (1843), he began to practise as a specialist in diseases of children. Until 1850 he was assistant at the children's dispensary of the university. In that year he became privat-docent; in 1858, assistant professor. In 1872 Henoch became director of the hospital and dispensary of the department of pediatrics at the Charité. In 1893 he resigned that position, received the title of "Medicinalrath", and lived in retirement at Meran until 1898, when he removed to Dresden.

In 1868 he described the association of colic, bloody diarrhea, painful joints, and rash in the condition, previously described by his former medical school teacher Johann Lukas Schönlein, of the allergic non-thrombopenic purpural rash that became known as Henoch–Schönlein purpura, though now known as IgA vasculitis.[2][3]

Literary works

Among his works may be mentioned:

References

  1. Introduction to the history of medicine c. 2 by Fielding Hudson Garrison
  2. J. C. Jennette; R. J. Falk; P. A. Bacon; et al. (January 2013). "2012 Revised International Chapel Hill Consensus Conference Nomenclature of Vasculitides". Arthritis & Rheumatism. 65 (1): 1–11. doi:10.1002/art.37715. PMID 23045170.
  3. Schönlein-Henoch purpura at Who Named It?

External links


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