Ludwig Halberstädter

Ludwig Halberstädter (left) and Stanislaus von Prowazek (center) conduct an experiment on a man holding an orangutan during their research into cytoplasmic inclusion bodies of trachoma c. 1907.

Ludwig Halberstädter (9 December 1876, Beuthen, Oberschlesien - 20 August 1949) was a German-Jewish radiologist.

In 1901 he obtained his medical doctorate from the University of Breslau, and following graduation became an assistant to surgeon Carl Garré (1857-1928) at the University of Königsberg. Afterwards he returned to Breslau as an assistant to dermatologist Albert Neisser (1855-1916), under whose direction he participated on a medical research mission to Java (1907).

In 1922 he obtained his habilitation for dermatology and radiation therapy in Berlin. Here he became director of the radiation department at the Instituts für Krebsforschung (Institute for Cancer Research), Berlin-Dahlem. In this capacity he used thorium as a treatment for cancer.[1] In 1933 he emigrated from Nazi Germany to Palestine, where he became director of radiation therapy at the Hadassah Hospital in Jerusalem. He died in New York City on August 20, 1949.

In 1905 he introduced radiation for ablation of the ovaries.[2]

Associated eponym

Publications

References

  1. Halberstädter, Ludwig. Deutsche-biographie.de.
  2. Wagener, D. J. Th. (2009). The History of Oncology. Bohn Stafleu van Loghum. pp. 187–. ISBN 978-90-313-6143-4.
  3. Halberstädter-Prowazek bodies @ Who Named It
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