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"Bilharz" redirects here. For the lunar crater, see Bilharz (crater).
Theodor Maximilian Bilharz (March 23, 1825 – May 9, 1862) was a German physician and an important pioneer in the field of parasitology.
EducationAttended the secondary school in Sigmaringen and took an early interest in entomology and studied philosophy for two years at the Albert-Ludwigs-Universität in Freiburg im Breisgau. He graduated as a pathologist from the University of Tübingen in 1848.1 Medical careerIn 1850 he moved to Egypt and became the first chief of the surgery at the Kasr-el-Aini Medical School of Cairo. In 1851, during an autopsy, he discovered Distomum haematobium (since renamed Schistosoma haematobium), the trematode worm that is the cause of urinary schistosomiasis, In 1853 he became chief of medicine there. In 1856 he was appointed Professor of Anatomy. He died on an expedition to Massawa in 1862, of typhus, at the age of 37.234 Bilharzia is a common name for schistosomiasis. The Theodor Bilharz Research Institute in Giza, Egypt, is named in his honour, as is Bilharz crater on the Moon. References
Further readingSchadewaldt, Hans (1970-80). "Bilharz, Theodor". Dictionary of Scientific Biography 2. New York: Charles Scribner's Sons. 127-128. ISBN 0684101149. |
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