Alexander von Winiwarter

Alexander von Winiwarter (April 22, 1848 – October 31, 1917) was an Austrian-Belgian surgeon who was a native of Vienna. He was the brother of physician Felix von Winiwarter (1852-1931).

Alexander von Winiwarter
Born(1848-04-22)April 22, 1848
DiedOctober 31, 1917(1917-10-31) (aged 69)
NationalityAustrian-Belgian
Occupationsurgeon

Alexander Winiwarter obtained his medical doctorate in 1870 at the University of Vienna, and worked as a surgical assistant at the Vienna University Clinic under Theodor Billroth, a pioneer in the field of modern surgical practices. Later, he became head of the surgical department at the Kronprinz-Rudolf-Kinderspitals (Crown Prince Rudolf Children's Hospital), and in 1878 relocated to Belgium, where he became a professor of surgery at the University of Liège. Subsequently, he acquired Belgian citizenship.

In the latter part of the 19th century, Winiwarter introduced specialized massage and compression procedures to treat lymphedema, a disease that causes swollen arms and legs due to fluid retention in the lymphatic system.[1] In 1932, Danish physiotherapist Emil Vodder refined and improved Winiwarter's technique to treat lymphedema. Vodder's treatment was to become known as manual lymphatic drainage.

Selected writings

  • Untersuchungen über die Gehörschnecke der Säugethiere (Studies on the cochlea in mammals), 1870.
  • Zur pathologischen Anatomie der Leber (On the pathological anatomy of the liver), 1872.
  • Das maligne Lymphom und das Lymphosarkom (Malignant lymphoma and lymphosarcoma) in Langenbeck's Archive, 1874.
  • Beiträge zur Statistik der Carcinome (Contributions involving statistics of carcinoma), 1878.
  • Zur Chirurgie der Gallenwege (On the surgery of bile ducts), Commemorative publication in honor of Billroth, 1892.
  • Die chirurgischen Krankheiten der Haut und des Unterhautzellgewebes (Surgical diseases of the skin and subcutaneous tissue), 1893.
  • Die Lehre von den chirurgischen Operationen und den chirurgischen Verbänden, 1895
gollark: > checkmate simulation theory 😎If this is meant unironically, then no.
gollark: (Almost) nobody analyses a computer program by simulating every atom in the CPU or something.
gollark: There are, still, apparently reasonably good and useful-for-predictions models of what people do in stuff like behavioral economics and psychology, even if exactly how stuff works isn't known.
gollark: We cannot, yet, just spin up a bunch of test societies with and without [CONTENTIOUS THING REDACTED] to see if this is actually true.
gollark: > Everything can, and should be tested objectivelySay someone tells you "[CONTENTIOUS THING REDACTED] weakens the fabric of society" or something. We can take this to mean something like "[CONTENTIOUS THING REDACTED] leads to societies being worse off in the long run". How can you actually test this?

References

  1. "Archived copy" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2011-09-28. Retrieved 2009-05-25.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link) Dissertation on Liposuction Combined with Controlled Therapy by Hekan Brorsen and Henry Svensson, Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery
  • This article is based on a translation of the equivalent article from the German Wikipedia.


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