Karl Friedrich Canstatt

Karl Friedrich Canstatt (11 July 1807, Regensburg – 10 March 1850, Erlangen) was a German physician and medical author.

Biography

He received his education at the University of Vienna, followed by studies under Johann Lukas Schönlein at the University of Wurzburg, where in 1831 he obtained his medical doctorate. The following year, he went to Paris to study Asiatic cholera, a disease that was then epidemic in the French capital. Canstatt's study of the disease, published in 1832, attracted the attention of the Belgian government, which commissioned him to take charge in establishment and management of a cholera hospital.

He remained in Brussels until 1838, afterwards returning to Regensburg in order to practice ophthalmology. The same year he was appointed physician to the provincial law court at Ansbach, where he stayed until 1843. Following the death of professor Adolph Henke (1843), he was appointed to the chair of pathology at the University of Erlangen. In 1846, he was stricken with tuberculosis, and believing that a change of climate would be beneficial, he relocated to Pisa. After a period of time in Italy, with no substantial improvement to his health, he returned to Erlangen.[1]

Works

Canstatt's greatest service to medicine was the creation and publication of the yearbook, Jahresbericht über die Fortschritte der Gesammten Medicin in Allen Ländern (Annual report of progress on the whole of medicine in all countries), begun in 1841, and continued for many years after his death.[2] He was also the author of treatises on diseases of the eyes (1841) and Bright's disease (1844).

He also appears to have been the first to use the term psychosis in his 1841 Handbook.[3]

Significant publications by Canstatt include:

See also

Notes

  1. Biography at Allgemeine Deutsche Biographie
  2. Google Books Jahresbericht über die Fortschritte der Gesammten Medicin in Allen Ländern
  3. The Concept of Psychosis: Historical and Phenomenological Aspects Martin Bürgy, Schizophr Bull (2008) 34 (6): 1200-1210. doi: 10.1093/schbul/sbm136

References

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