Everything about Rudolph Virchow totally explained
Rudolf Ludwig Karl Virchow (
October 13,
1821,
Schivelbein (
Pomerania) -
September 5,
1902,
Berlin) was a
German doctor,
anthropologist, public health
activist,
pathologist,
prehistorian,
biologist and
politician. He is referred to as the "Father of Pathology," and founded the field of
Social Medicine.
Scientific Career
From a farming family of relatively modest means, Virchow studied
medicine in Berlin at the military academy of
Prussia on a scholarship. When he graduated in 1842 he went to serve as
Robert Froriep's assistant at the Berlin
Charité rather than the expected military service. He was employed as an intern at Charité Hospital in Berlin but was suspended on
March 31,
1849 because of his liberal view of the German government. Due to political reasons, he moved to
Würzburg to study and teach
anatomy. In 1856, he returned to Berlin as a professor of anatomic pathology (a chair created just for him) at
Berlin University and the Berlin Charité where he'd previously worked as Froriep's assistant. One of his major contributions to German medical education was to encourage the use of microscopes by medical students and was known for constantly urging his students to 'think microscopically'. The campus where this Charité hospital is located is named after him, the Campus Virchow Klinikum.
Virchow is credited with multiple significant discoveries.Although he and Theodor Schwann are not mentioned together. His most widely known is indeed his cell theory. He is cited as the first to recognize
leukemia. However, he's perhaps best known for his theory
Omnis cellula e cellula ("every cell originates from another existing cell like it.") which he published in 1858. (The
epigram was actually coined by
François-Vincent Raspail but popularized by Virchow). It is a rejection of the concept of spontaneous generation, which held that organisms could arise from non-living matter. It was believed, for example, that maggots could spontaneously appear in decaying meat;
Francesco Redi carried out experiments which disproved this. Redi's work gave rise to the maxim
Omne vivum ex ovo ("every living thing comes from a living thing"), Virchow (and his predecessors) extended this to state that the only source for a living cell was another living cell.
Another significant credit relates to the discovery, made approximately simultaneously by Virchow and
Charles Emile Troisier, that an enlarged left supra-clavicular node is one of the earliest signs of gastrointestinal malignancy, commonly of the stomach, or less commonly, lung cancer. This has become known as
Virchow's node and simultaneously
Troisier's sign.
Virchow is also famous for elucidating the mechanism of pulmonary
thromboembolism, coining the term
embolism. He noted that blood clots in the pulmonary artery originate first from venous thrombi, stating: "The detachment of larger or smaller fragments from the end of the softening thrombus which are carried along by the current of blood and driven into remote vessels. This gives rise to the very frequent process on which I've bestowed the name of Embolia." Related to this research, Virchow described the factors contributing to venous thrombosis,
Virchow's triad.
Furthermore, Virchow founded the medical disciplines of
cellular pathology,
comparative pathology (comparison of diseases common to
humans and
animals). His very innovative work may be viewed as sitting between that of
Morgagni whose work Virchow studied, and that of
Paul Ehrlich, who studied at the Charité while Virchow was developing microscopic pathology there.
In 1869 he founded the Society for anthropology,
ethnology and
prehistory (Gesellschaft für Anthropologie, Ethnologie und Urgeschichte) which was very influential in coordinating and intensifying German archaeological research. In 1885 he launched a study of
craniometry, which gave surprising results according to contemporary
scientific racist theories on the "
Aryan race", leading him to denounce the "
Nordic mysticism" in the 1885 Anthropology Congress in
Karlsruhe.
Josef Kollmann, a collaborator of Virchow, stated in the same congress that the people of Europe, be them German, Italian, English or French, belonged to a "mixture of various races," furthermore declaring that the "results of craniology" led to "struggle against any theory concerning the superiority of this or that European race" on others .
In 1892 he was awarded the
Copley Medal.
He was a very prolific writer. Some of his works are:
- Mittelheilungen über die Typhus-Epidemie, (1848)
- Die Cellularpathologie, (1858), English translation, (1860)
- Handbuch Media:der speciellen Pathologie und Therapie, (1854-62)
- Vorlesungen über Pathologie, (1862-72)
- Die krankhaften Geschwülste, (1863-67)
- Gegen den Antisemitismus, (1880)
He also developed a standard method of
autopsy procedure, named for him, that's still one of the two main techniques used today.
More than a laboratory physician, Virchow was an impassioned advocate for social and political reform, stating that physicians should act as "attorneys for the poor." His views are evident in his "Report on the
Typhus Outbreak of
Upper Silesia (1848),"writing that the outbreak couldn't be solved by treating individual patients with drugs or with minor changes in food, housing, or clothing laws, but only through radical action to promote the advancement of an entire population.
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He is widely regarded as a pioneer of
social medicine.
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anthropology."
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Hostility toward antiseptics
Despite these many accomplishments in medicine, Virchow's reputation is blackened by his rejection of and hostility towards the theory that bacteria cause disease. His attacks on Ignaz Semmelweis's advocacy of antisepsis delayed the use of antiseptics.
He died following a hip fracture that he sustained falling from a tram.
Medical terms
Virchow's angle — The angle between the nasobasilar line and the nasosubnasal line.
Virchow's disease — leontiasis ossium.
Virchow's line — a line from the root of the nose to the lambda.
Virchow's method of autopsy — A method of autopsy where each organ is taken out one by one. Other methods are Letulle's method, where they're taken out en bloc, Rokitansky's method, where they're examined in situ, and Ghon's method where they're usually taken out in three separate blocks - a cervical block, a thoracic block and an abdominopelvic block.
Virchow's node — the presence of metastatic cancer in a lymph-node in the supraclavicular fossa (root of the neck left of the midline). Also known as Troisier's sign.
Virchow's triad — factors contributing toward venous thrombus formation.
;Dorland's Medical Dictionary (1938)
Political career
Virchow also worked as a politician (member of the Berlin City Council, the Prussian parliament since 1861, German Reichstag 1880-1893) to improve the health care conditions for the Berlin citizens, namely working towards modern water and sewer systems. Virchow is also credited with the founding of "Social Medicine", frequently focusing on the fact that disease is never purely biological, but often, socially derived. As a co-founder and member of the liberal party (Deutschen Fortschrittspartei) he was an important political antagonist of Bismarck.
One area where he co-operated with Bismarck was in the Kulturkampf, the anti-clerical campaign against the Catholic Church claiming that the anti-clerical laws bore "the character of a great struggle in the interest of humanity".. It was during the discussion of Falk’s May Laws (Maigesetze) that Virchow first used the term
Virchow was respected in Masonic circles, and according to one source may have been a freemason, though no official record of this has been found.
The Society for Medical Anthropology gives an annual award in Virchow's name, Rudolph Virchow Award.
Further Information
Get more info on 'Rudolph Virchow'.
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