- Ludwik Hirszfeld
Infobox_Scientist
name = Ludwik Hirszfeld
caption = Hirszfeld in 1954, a microbiologist and a serologist
birth_date = birth date|1884|8|5|mf=y
birth_place =
death_date = death date and age|1954|3|7|1884|8|5|mf=y
death_place =
residence = flagicon|PolandPoland
nationality = flagicon|Poland Polish
field =Microbiology ,Serology
work_institution =
alma_mater =
doctoral_advisor =
doctoral_students =
known_for = discoverery of the inheritance of ABO blood type
prizes =
religion =
footnotes =Ludwik Hirszfeld (
August 5 1884 Warsaw –March 7 1954 Wroclaw ) was a Polish microbiologist and a serologist. He is considered one of the co-discoverers of the inheritance of ABO blood type. He established a laboratory of experimental medicine at the State Institute of Hygiene in Poland shortly afterWorld War I . In 1946, he published his autobiography, "The Story of One Life."Life
After attending the Gymnasium in
Łódź , Hirszfeld, born into a Jewish family and later a convert toCatholicism , decided to studymedicine inGermany . In 1902 he entered theUniversity of Würzburg and transferred in 1904 toBerlin , where he attended lectures in medicine and philosophy. Hirszfeld completed his doctoral dissertation, "Über Blutagglutination," in 1907, thus taking the first step in what was to become his specialty. But first he became a junior assistant in cancer research at the Heidelberg Institute for Experimental Cancer Research, where E. von Dungern was his department head. Hirszfeld soon formed a close personal friendship with Dungern which proved to be scientifically fruitful. At Heidelberg they did the first joint work on animal and human blood groups which, in 1900, had been identified as isoagglutinins byKarl Landsteiner .Hirszfeld gradually found the working conditions at
Heidelberg too confining and to familiarize himself with the entire field of hygiene and microbiology, in 1911 he accepted an assistantship at the Hygiene Institute of theUniversity of Zurich , just after he had married. His wife, also a physician, became an assistant at the Zurich Children's Clinic underEmil Feer .In 1914 Hirszfeld was made an academic lecturer on the basis of his work on
anaphylaxis andanaphylatoxin and their relationships tocoagulation ; he was also named "Privatdozent." When World War I broke outSerbia was devastated by epidemics oftyphus and bacillarydysentery . In 1915 Hirszfeld applied for duty there. He remained with the Serbian army until the end of the war, serving as serological and bacteriological adviser. At this time, in the hospital for contagious diseases inThessaloniki he discovered the bacillus "Salmonella paratyphi" C, today called "Salmonella hirszfeldi."After the end of the war Hirszfeld and his wife returned to
Warsaw , where he established a Polish serum institute modeled after theEhrlich Institute for Experimental Therapy inFrankfurt . He soon became deputy director and scientific head of the State Hygiene Institute in Warsaw and, in 1924, professor there. In 1931 he was named full professor at the University of Warsaw and served on many international boards. After the occupation of Poland by the German army Hirszfeld was dismissed as a "non-Aryan" from the Hygiene Institute but, through the protection of friends, managed to do further scientific work at home until February 1941; it was, however, almost impossible for him to publish.On 20 February 1941 Hirszfeld was forced to move into the
Warsaw ghetto with his wife and daughter. There he organized anti-epidemic measures and vaccination campaigns against typhus and typhoid, as well as conducting secret medical courses. In 1943 he and his family fled the ghetto and were able to survive underground through using false names and continually changing their hiding place; his daughter died oftuberculosis in the same year.When a part of Poland was liberated in 1944, Hirszfeld immediately collaborated in the establishment of the University of
Lublin and becameprorector of the university. In 1945 he became director of the Institute for Medical Microbiology atWrocław and dean of the medical faculty. He taught at the institute, now affiliated with thePolish Academy of Sciences and named after him, until his death.Hirszfeld received many honors, including honorary doctorates from the universities of Prague (1950) and Zurich (1951). He wrote almost 400 works in German, French, English, and Polish, many in collaboration with other well-known scholars and not a few with his wife.
Hirszfeld and von Dungern were responsible for naming the blood groups A, B, AB, and O; previously they were known as groups I, II, III, and IV. He proposed the A and B designations for the
agglutinin s. In 1910-1911 Hirszfeld discovered the heritability of blood groups and with this discovery established serological paternity exclusion. During World War I he and his wife wrote works onsero-anthropology , which brought forth fundamental findings on the racial composition of recent and historical peoples. According to his so-calledPleiades theory of blood groups, the other groups probably developed from the archaic O group in the course of evolution. cite journal |author=LILLE-SZYSZKOWICZ I |title= [Development of studies on pleiades of blood groups.] |journal=Postȩpy higieny i medycyny doświadczalnej |volume=11 |issue=3 |pages=229–33 |year=1957 |pmid=13505351]Hirszfeld was the first to foresee the serological conflict between mother and child, which was confirmed by the discovery of the Rhesus factor. Upon this basis he developed, in the last years of his life, an "allergic" theory of miscarriage and recommended
antihistamine therapy . Hirszfeld also investigatedtumors and the serology of tuberculosis. His discovery of the infectious agent ofparatyphoid C had far-reaching consequences for differential diagnosis.In 1914, together with R. Klinger, Hirszfeld developed a serodiagnostic reaction test for syphilis, which did not, however, replace the
Wasserman test introduced in 1906. His studies of goiter in Swiss endemic regions brought him into sharp disagreement withE. Bircher over the theory -- today widely confirmed -- that endemicGoitre s are caused byiodine deficiency in water and food, in opposition to thehydrotelluric theory .ee also
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Blood type
*Occupational hygiene References
Persondata
NAME= Hirszfeld, Ludwik
ALTERNATIVE NAMES=
SHORT DESCRIPTION= Polish microbiologist
DATE OF BIRTH=August 5 1884
PLACE OF BIRTH=
DATE OF DEATH=March 7 1954
PLACE OF DEATH=
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