词条 | Jan Mikulicz-Radecki |
释义 |
|name = Jan Mikulicz-Radecki |image =Jan_Mikulicz-Radecki_(c._1878).jpg |image_size = 150px |caption = Jan Mikulicz-Radecki, 1878 |birth_date = 16 May 1850 |birth_place = Czernowitz (Chernivtsi), Bukovina, Austrian Empire |death_date = {{death-date and age|4 June 1905|16 May 1850}} |death_place = Breslau, German Empire (now Wrocław, Poland) |residence = |citizenship = |nationality = Polish |ethnicity = |field = surgeon |work_institutions = Kraków Königsberg Breslau |alma_mater = University of Vienna |doctoral_advisor = Theodor Billroth |doctoral_students = |known_for = |author_abbrev_bot = |author_abbrev_zoo = |influences = |influenced = Ferdinand Sauerbruch Walther Kausch Ludwik Rydygier |prizes = |religion = |footnotes = |signature = }} Jan Mikulicz-Radecki ({{lang-de|Johann Freiherr von Mikulicz-Radecki}}) was a Polish surgeon. He was born on 16 May 1850 in Czerniowce in the Austrian Empire (present-day Chernivtsi in Ukraine) and died on 4 June 1905 in Breslau, German Empire. He was professor in Kraków, Wrocław, and Królewiec (Königsberg). He was the inventor of new operating techniques and tools, and is one of the pioneers of antiseptics and aseptic techniques. In Poland he is regarded as one of the founders of the Kraków school of surgery. His parental ancestors of the Mikulicz family were of Polish szlachta origin and had been granted the Gozdawa coat of arms by King John III Sobieski after the 1683 Battle of Vienna. His mother Freiin von Damnitz was of Austrian descent. Mikulicz-Radecki spoke his native Polish, and also German, Russian and English fluently. When asked his nationality he used to answer "surgeon".[1] After finishing studies at the University of Vienna under Theodor Billroth, he was a director of surgery at the Jagiellonian University in Kraków, the University of Königsberg (Królewiec, Kaliningrad) and from 1890 at the University of Wrocław.[2] Mikulicz-Radecki's innovations in operative technique for a wide variety of diseases helped develop modern surgery. He contributed prodigiously to cancer surgery, especially on organs of the digestive system. He was first to suture a perforated gastric ulcer (1885), surgically restore part of the oesophagus (1886), remove a malignant part of the colon (1903), and describe what is now known as Mikulicz’ disease. In 1881 he developed improved models of the esophagoscope and gastroscope. As an ardent advocate of antiseptics, he did much to popularize Joseph Lister's antiseptic methods. He created a surgical mask and was the first to use medical gloves during surgery. Mikulicz-Radecki was a talented amateur pianist and a friend of Johannes Brahms.[3] He received an honorary doctorate (LL.D) from the University of Glasgow in June 1901.[4] Associated eponyms
References{{More footnotes|article|date=July 2009}}1. ^Wojciech Kustzrycki: International symposium for cardiothoracic surgery 4–6 November 2004 in Wroclaw, Deutsche Gesellschaft für Chirurgie - Mitteilungen 2/2005: 154-8 (PDF) (German) 2. ^{{cite book | title=Dzieje nauki polskiej | last= Iłowiecki | first=Maciej | year=1981 | publisher=Wydawnictwo Interpress | location=Warszawa |page= 196 | isbn=83-223-1876-6}} 3. ^Hans Barkan, editor, Johannes Brahms and Theodor Billroth: Letters from a Musical Friendship (1957, Oklahoma University Press, {{LCCN|57011190}}) 4. ^{{Cite newspaper The Times |articlename=Glasgow University jubilee |day_of_week=Friday |date=14 June 1901 |page_number=10 |issue=36481}} External links
10 : 1850 births|1905 deaths|Polish surgeons|Polish nobility|University of Vienna alumni|Jagiellonian University faculty|University of Breslau faculty|People from Chernivtsi|Polish Austro-Hungarians|Barons of Austria |
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