Factbites
 Where results make sense
About us   |   Why use us?   |   Reviews   |   PR   |   Contact us  

Topic: Ferdinand Sauerbruch


Related Topics

In the News (Fri 25 Dec 09)

  
  Ferdinand Sauerbruch - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Sauerbruch was born in Barmen (now a district of Wuppertal), Germany.
Sauerbruch worked at the Ludwig Maximilians University of Munich from 1918 to 1927 on surgical techniques and diets for treating tuberculosis.
Sauerbruch died in Berlin at the age of seventy-five.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Ferdinand_Sauerbruch   (215 words)

  
 Ferdinand Sauerbruch -- Facts, Info, and Encyclopedia article   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-21)
Ernst Ferdinand Sauerbruch (3rd July 1875– 2nd July 1951) was a (A person of German nationality) German (A physician who specializes in surgery) surgeon.
Sauerbruch was born in (Click link for more info and facts about Barmen) Barmen near (Click link for more info and facts about Wuppertal) Wuppertal, Germany.
He went to (A city in southwestern Poland on the Oder) Breslau in 1903, where he developed and demonstrated the Sauerbruch chamber, a pressure chamber for operating on the open (The part of the human body between the neck and the diaphragm or the corresponding part in other vertebrates) thorax, in 1904.
www.absoluteastronomy.com /encyclopedia/f/fe/ferdinand_sauerbruch.htm   (154 words)

  
 Scientific Anti-Vivisectionism ->
Sauerbruch reasoned that if positive-pressure on the inside would not work, then perhaps negative pressure on the outside might be effective.
From these animal experiments, Sauerbruch concluded that negative-pressure cabinets were the final solution to the problem of the open thorax.
After Sauerbruch`s animal experiments, Samuel J Meltzer, in 1910, revived the technique of insufflation - in which air is continually blown into the lungs - in his own animal experiments.
www.freewebs.com /scientific_anti_vivisectionism4/lifesupportsystem.htm   (963 words)

  
 Ferdinand Sauerbruch   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-21)
He went to Breslau in 1903, where he developed anddemonstrated the Sauerbruch chamber, a pressure chamber for operating on the open thorax, in 1904.
Sauerbruch worked at the University of Munich from 1918to 1927 on operation techniques and diets for treating tuberculosis.
Sauerbruch died in Berlin atthe age of 75.
www.therfcc.org /ferdinand-sauerbruch-9841.html   (138 words)

  
 Bon Vital - About Algemarin
Ferdinand Sauerbruch - they started evaluating the dermatological findings and formulas of this famous doctor.
Professor Sauerbruch, too, was a founding member of this enterprise, and Wolfgang Böttger is the managing associate from the very beginning.
Based on the research results of famous professor Dr. Ferdinand Sauerbruch, BÖTTGER'S R and D developed special methods for the manufacturing of highly effective active materials.
www.bonvital.com /aboutam   (293 words)

  
 A Cancer Therapy back cover   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-21)
He was director of a special department of tuberculosis at the Munich University Hospital under the sponsorship of Dr. Ferdinand Sauerbruch, a world famous thoracic surgeon and tuberculosis authority.
In 1929, Sauerbruch announced Gerson's dietary therapy as a cure for skin TB, publishing simultaneously in a dozen of the world's leading peer reviewed scientific journals.
Sauerbruch told of a clinical trial of Gerson's dietary treatment in which 446 of 450 TB patients achieved lasting cures (also mentioned in Sauerbruch's autobiography, Master Surgeon).
www.cancer-free.com /books/canther2.htm   (458 words)

  
 Doktors of Doom
Sauerbruch’s chief assistant burst into the room to say that a patient’s cerebral tumour was finally exposed to view and that in his opinion the prognosis was bad.
Naas’s verdict was chilling; he refused to discipline Sauerbruch or bar him from surgical duties, saying: “In the coming struggle of the proletariat… millions will lose their lives… It is trivial whether Sauerbruch kills a few dozen people on his operating table.
Sauerbruch’s wife was so horrified by the scene, she phoned the medical authorities to come and stop the butchery.
www.forteantimes.com /articles/139_nazidocs.shtml   (2768 words)

  
 Read about Ferdinand Sauerbruch at WorldVillage Encyclopedia. Research Ferdinand Sauerbruch and learn about Ferdinand ...   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-21)
Ernst Ferdinand Sauerbruch (3rd July 1875– 2nd July 1951) was a
Sauerbruch chamber, a pressure chamber for operating on the open thorax, in 1904.
Sauerbruch worked at the University of Munich from 1918 to 1927 on operation techniques and diets for treating
encyclopedia.worldvillage.com /s/b/Ferdinand_Sauerbruch   (165 words)

  
 [No title]   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-21)
This discovery led Gerson to further study the diet, and he went on to successfully treat many tuberculosis patients.
His work eventually came to the attention of famed thoracic surgeon, Ferdinand Sauerbruch, M.D. Under Sauerbruch’s supervision, Dr. Gerson established a special skin tuberculosis treatment program at the Munich University Hospital.
Sauerbruch and Dr. Gerson simultaneously published articles in a dozen of the world’s leading medical journals, establishing the Gerson treatment as the first cure for skin tuberculosis.
www.gerson.org /about/mg.asp   (441 words)

  
 Development of rehabilitation engineering over the years: As I see it   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-21)
Ferdinand Sauerbruch is a legitimate candidate to be considered the founding father of rehabilitation engineering.
Photograph of Ferdinand Sauerbruch, MD, one of the first physicians to work with an engineer to design an artificial arm.
Sauerbruch developed the “team” approach during his work on tunnel cineplasty for direct muscular control of artificial hands and arms.
www.vard.org /jour/02/39/6/sup/childress.html   (4812 words)

  
 Hitler's doctor foresaw world's 'craziest criminal': 4/28/01
The comments on Hitler, attributed to German surgeon Ferdinand Sauerbruch, were written in a Dec. 7, 1944, memo from Ron Carroll of the Office of Strategic Services, forerunner of the Central Intelligence Agency.
It continued that when Bie and Sauerbruch again met in April 1937, the doctor "stated that in his opinion, the swing towards insanity had taken place and that the first symptom was the dismissal of moderate members of Hitler's government."
The file on Hitler was among those that U.S. intelligence kept on 20 Nazi-era figures, including Gestapo chief Heinrich Mueller and Dr. Josef Mengele, known for his horrific medical experiments on concentration camp prisoners.
www.s-t.com /daily/04-01/04-28-01/a02wn012.htm   (380 words)

  
 NARA - Prologue - Prologue
One center of anti-Nazi sentiment in Berlin was the university hospital directed by Sauerbruch, the most famous surgeon in Germany during the Third Reich.
Sauerbruch had initially supported Hitler and the Nazi Party and was often called upon to operate on important Nazi leaders, including Propaganda Minister Goebbels, and he even performed a throat operation on Hitler in 1940.
At some point, probably during 1940 - 1942, Sauerbruch became an anti-Nazi and was involved in the resistance movement.
www.archives.gov /publications/prologue/2002/spring/fritz-kolbe-2.html   (3543 words)

  
 Shawnee News-Star: Central Oklahoma's #1 news source! Hitler's doctor foresaw world's 'craziest criminal' 04/28/01
The comments on Hitler, attributed to German surgeon Ferdinand Sauerbruch, were written in a Dec. 7, 1944, memo from Ron Carroll of the Office of Strategic Services.
While noting there was a question about the credibility of the informant, Hans Bie, he said that Bie told him he had talked to Sauerbruch at a party in January 1937 and that Sauerbruch discussed Hitler.
Sauerbruch then said that should the latter occur, Hitler would become "the craziest criminal the world ever saw," the memo said.
www.news-star.com /stories/042801/new_hitler.shtml   (791 words)

  
 USATODAY.com - Hitler's doctor foresaw world's 'craziest criminal'   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-21)
The comments reportedly made by German surgeon Ferdinand Sauerbruch were written in a memo Dec. 7, 1944, from Ron Carroll of the Office of Strategic Services, forerunner of the Central Intelligence Agency.
"Sauerbruch then said that should the latter occur, Hitler would become 'the craziest criminal the world ever saw,' " the memo said.
It went on to say that when Bie and Sauerbruch again met in April 1937, the doctor "stated that in his opinion, the swing towards insanity had taken place and that the first symptom was the dismissal of moderate members of Hitler's government."
www.usatoday.com /news/washington/2001-04-27-hitler.htm   (476 words)

  
 Bio 108 - Organ Replacement - Hand Prosthetics - Procedure
Tunnel cineplasty was developed initially by German surgeon Ernst Ferdinand Sauerbruch, before World War I, based on earlier work in Italy.
With the use of a team approach to rehabilitation--surgeon, physiologist, and technician working together--tunnels were constructed in the muscles of the residual limb and lined with skin grafts.
There were several stages in the evolution of this method, including the biceps tunnel cineplasty developed by surgeon M. Lebsche, a student of Sauerbruch.
biomed.brown.edu /Courses/BI108/BI108_2003_Groups/Hand_Prosthetics/procedure.html   (1651 words)

  
 AlternativesInCancerTherapy1.htm
Even though he was told that migraines were unbeatable, he found that he could control them by avoiding certain foods and eating a low-salt, primarily vegetarian diet, with lots of fresh fruit and vegetables.
After medical school he became director of a special department of tuberculosis at the Munich University Hospital, under the sponsorship of the renowned Dr. Ferdinand Sauerbruch, who developed open-chest surgery and was an authority on tuberculosis.
Sauerbruch announced in a number of the world's leading scientific journals that Gerson's dietary therapy was a cure for skin tuberculosis.
www.curezone.com /diseases/cancer/gerson.html   (2578 words)

  
 MILITARIA COLLECTING FORUM > ARTS AND SCIENCE AWARD   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-21)
On September 3 1937 Goebbels noted into his diary: The Führers leading opinion for the Nationalpreis award was: Rosenberg, Sauerbruch and Furtwaengler.
On September 7 1937: With the Führer we discussed the national winner: we agreed on the following basis: Troost again for the sake of posthumously(beyond the grave), then next in line were Rosenberg, Sauerbruch and Filchner.
Sauerbruch of Baden-Baden into this area with the airplane research.
www.militariacollecting.com /lofiversion/index.php/t1362.html   (1614 words)

  
 Nat' Academies Press, Enabling America: Assessing the Role of Rehabilitation Science and Engineering (1997)
Ferdinand Sauerbruch was one of the first surgeons to recommend multidisciplinary scientific and engineering endeavors in rehabilitation.
In Zurich, in 1915, he worked together with Aurel Stodola, a professor of mechanics at the Polytechnical Institute of Zurich, to produce a hand prosthesis that was controlled and powered through muscle cineplasty.
Sauerbruch relied heavily on muscle physiologists and anatomists to assist him with decisions about how to successfully bring muscle forces outside the body using the surgical procedure of tunnel cineplasty, a technique that he advanced at an army hospital in Germany.
www.nap.edu /books/0309063744/html/28.html   (716 words)

  
 FERDINAND   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-21)
Search the FERDINAND Family Message Boards at Ancestry.com (if available).
Search the FERDINAND Family Resource Center at RootsWeb.com (if available).
Find graves of people named FERDINAND at Find-a-Grave.com (or add one that you know).
www.worldhistory.com /surname/US/F/FERDINAND.htm   (73 words)

  
 IWFmedienkatalog - Details zu "Ferdinand Sauerbruch in der Chirurgischen Universitätsklinik der Charité Berlin, ...
Ferdinand Sauerbruch in der Chirurgischen Universitätsklinik der Charité Berlin, Dezember 1943
Ferdinand Sauerbruch in the Charité Surgical Clinic of the University of Berlin, December 1943
Sauerbruch doziert im Hörsaal der chirurgischen Universitätsklinik Berlin vor einer Gruppe Studenten über den Ulcus ventriculi, dessen chirurgische Behandlung (Gastroenterostomie) und die daraus resultierende Hauptkomplikation (ulcus pepticum jejuni).
mkat.iwf.de /medien/katalog/Kat_Details.asp?Signatur=G+12&Language=en   (116 words)

  
 Rudolf Nissen (www.whonamedit.com)
However, in September 1922 he received a surprising invitation to work with Ernst Ferdinand Sauerbruch (1875-1951) in Munich.
The next year he followed Sauerbruch to the Berlin Charité, where he became Sauerbruch's deputy and professor extraordinary in 1930.
However, in 1948 he visited his native country and met his old friend and mentor Sauerbruch for the last time.
www.whonamedit.com /doctor.cfm/2594.html   (575 words)

  
 The Indian Express: Top stories: Full story   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-21)
Among the files was a 1944 report by an informant working for the Office of Strategic Services (OSS) — CIA’s forerunner — that related an assessment of Hitler’s personality by the Fuehrer’s personal physician.
At a party in January 1937, the OSS informant struck up a conversation with Ferdinand Sauerbruch, a well-known professor of surgery at Berlin University.
Sauerbruch, according to the intelligence report, candidly spoke of Hitler’s growing megalomania and argued that he was a border case between genius and insanity, with the potential to become ‘‘the craziest criminal the world has known’’.
www.indianexpress.com /ie20010429/int1.html   (400 words)

  
 The mid-century revolution in thoracic and cardiovascular surgery: Part 1 -- Naef 2 (3): 219 -- Interactive ...
Sauerbruch in charge of a research project to solve the problem
6 Negative pressure chamber for operations in the chest (Sauerbruch – 1904).
New York pioneer, admirer of Sauerbruch and the negative pressure operation chamber.
icvts.ctsnetjournals.org /cgi/content/full/2/3/219   (2237 words)

  
 Nomination Database - The Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine
Banting and Macleod got the Nobel Prize in 1923 for their discovery of insulin - the first year they were nominated, and based on only three nominations!
In contrast, Robert Koch was nominated 55 times during four years before he received the Prize in 1905 for his discoveries concerning tuberculosis, while Ferdinand Sauerbruch, the great German surgeon never got the prize despite 54 nominations during 14 years.
This type of information, and much more, is available in the Nomination Database spanning the years 1901-1949.
nobelprize.org /medicine/nomination/database.html   (226 words)

  
 A City at War II   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-21)
She worked with her husband, Professor Ferdinand Sauerbruch, Germany's most eminent surgeon, in Berlin's oldest and largest hospital, the Charité, in the Mitte district.
From her examination of the victims, Dr. Sauerbruch had no illusions about the ferocity of the Red Army when it ran amok.
Margot Sauerbruch was appalled by the number of refugees who had attempted suicide-including scores of women who had not been molested or violated.
mars.acnet.wnec.edu /~grempel/courses/berlin/lectures/20CityatWar2.html   (3461 words)

  
 TIME Magazine Archive Article -- Arms, Made in Germany -- Sep. 07, 1942   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-21)
During World War I an ingenious German surgeon, Ernst Ferdinand Sauerbruch, developed a plastic operation to link the muscles of an amputated stump to an artificial arm so efficiently that the live muscles could operate the fingers of an artificial hand.
In a new book two German refugee surgeons describe the classic Sauerbruch technique (Cineplastic Operations on Stumps of the Upper Extremity; Grune and Stratton; $3.75).
The operation: two canals are fashioned In the muscles of the arm, one in the flexors, one in the extensors.
www.time.com /time/archive/printout/0,23657,773554,00.html   (154 words)

  
 History of the Gerson Therapy   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-21)
In later years, after research began to provide explanations for Gerson's clinical observations, he quoted Churchill on the mistaken course of action he had thus avoided: "Men occasionally stumble over the truth, but most pick themselves up and hurry off as if nothing had happened" (Gerson, 1958, 212).
In 1924 his success in treating tuberculosis of the skin brought an invitation from the noted thoracic surgeon, Ferdinand Sauerbruch, to test Gerson's diet in a special lupus clinic to be provided by the Bavarian government at the University of Munich.
As Sauerbruch recounts it in his autobiography, 446 patients out of 450 recovered - once he had discovered and put an end to the smuggling of sausages, cream and beer to the patients in the late afternoons (Sauerbruch, 1953, 167- 171).
www.coffee-enema.ca /gerson.htm   (4770 words)

Try your search on: Qwika (all wikis)

Factbites
  About us   |   Why use us?   |   Reviews   |   Press   |   Contact us  
Copyright © 2005-2007 www.factbites.com Usage implies agreement with terms.