Alfred Goldscheider

Alfred Goldscheider (1858-1935)

Johannes Karl Eugen Alfred Goldscheider (4 August 1858 10 April 1935) was a German neurologist born in Sommerfeld (today Lubsko, Poland).

He studied medicine at Friedrich-Wilhelm Medical-Surgical Institute in Berlin (promotion 1881), and subsequently spent the next seven years as a military physician. During this period of time, he also served as an assistant to physiologist Emil du Bois-Reymond (1818-1896). He later became a professor at the University of Berlin.

In Berlin, he served as directing physician at the Krankenhaus Moabit (from 1894) and at the Virchow-Krankenhaus (from 1906). In 1910 he succeeded Hermann Senator at the polyclinic.[1]

Research

Goldscheider is best known for his work with the somatosensory system, in particular, research of the body's thermoreceptors in regards to localized "coolness" and "warmness" spots. He also performed research of localized tactile skin sensitivity that included tests involving "pain" and "tickle" sensations. The eponymous terms; "Goldscheider's test" and "Goldscheider's percussion" are derived from his research. During this time period (the early 1880s), Swedish physician Magnus Blix (1849-1904) of the University of Uppsala was performing similar tests, independent of Goldscheider.

In the late 1890s, with neurologist Edward Flatau (1868-1932), Goldscheider performed studies on the structure of nerve cells and their changes under different stimuli. Also, he is credited with describing the skin disorder, epidermolysis bullosa, a condition sometimes called "Goldscheider's disease".[2]

Goldscheider died in Berlin.

Selected works

References

  1. Goldscheider, Johann Karl August Eugen Alfred in: Neue Deutsche Biographie (NDB). Band 6, Duncker & Humblot, Berlin 1964
  2. Norrsell U, Finger S and Lajonchere C. Cutaneous sensory spots and the "law of specific nerve energies": history and development of ideas [PDF]. Brain Research Bulletin. 1999 [archived September 30, 2011];48(5):457-465. doi:10.1016/S0361-9230(98)00067-7. PMID 10372506.
  3. OCLC Classify published works
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