Ottomar Rosenbach

Ottomar Ernst Felix Rosenbach (January 4, 1851, Krappitz, Silesia – March 20, 1907) was a German physician.

Krappitz was a Silesian city where his father, Samuel Rosenbach, practised medicine. He received his education at the universities of Berlin and Breslau (M.D. 1874). His studies were interrupted by the Franco-Prussian war, in which he took an active part as a volunteer. From 1874 to 1877 he was assistant to Wilhelm Olivier Leube (1842-1922) and Carl Wilhelm Hermann Nothnagel (1841-1905) at the medical hospital and dispensary of the University of Jena; in 1878 he was appointed assistant at the Allerheiligen-Hospital at Breslau, and became privatdozent at the university of that city; in 1887 he became chief of the medical department of the hospital, which position he resigned in 1893; and in 1888 he was appointed assistant professor. In 1896 he resigned his professorship and removed to Berlin, where he practised until his death.

He discovered unusual eye tremors when the eyelids are closed in patients with Graves disease, now known as "Rosenbach's sign".[1] He also described a clinical sign for aortic regurgitation (involving systolic pulsations of the liver) that too is referred to as "Rosenbach's sign".[2]

Literary works

Rosenbach wrote many essays for the medical journals, and is one of the collaborators on Albert Eulenburg's "Realencyclopädie der Gesammten Heilkunde" () (all three editions) and on Carl Nothnagel's "Spezielle Pathologie und Therapie" ().

Of his works may be mentioned:

Bibliography

 This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: Singer, Isidore; et al., eds. (1901–1906). "article name needed". Jewish Encyclopedia. New York: Funk & Wagnalls Company. [3]
By Isidore Singer & Frederick T. Haneman

Notes

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