Ernst Sträussler
Template:Short description Ernst Sträussler (17 June 1872 – 11 July 1959) was an Austrian neuropathologist.
Biography
Ernst Sträussler was born on 17 June 1872 in Uherské Hradiště, Moravia, Austria-Hungary. In 1895, he earned his medical doctorate at the University of Vienna, and afterwards worked at the psychiatric clinic of Julius Wagner-Jauregg (1857–1940). In 1907 he was habilitated for psychiatry and neurology in Prague, where in 1915 he attained the title of professor extraordinary. In 1919, he returned to Vienna.[1]
Sträussler is remembered for his work in forensic psychiatry, as well as his research involving the histopathology of the central nervous system.[1] With neurologist Georg Koskinas (1885–1975) he performed important studies involving malaria inoculations as a type of therapy for progressive general paresis.[2]
In 1936, with neurologists Josef Gerstmann (1887–1969) and Ilya Scheinker (1902–1954), he described a rare prion disease that is usually regarded as a variant of Creutzfeldt–Jakob disease. Today this condition is known as Gerstmann–Sträussler–Scheinker syndrome (GSS).[3]
He died on 11 July 1959 in Vienna.
Works
- Anlage- und Bildungsfehler des Centralnervensystems, Anlagekrankheiten, Missbildungen, Heredodegeneration. Handbuch der Neurolologie des Ohres. Volume 2, 1. Berlin and Vienna, 1928.
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References
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- ↑ a b Ernst Sträussler @ Who Named It
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- ↑ A Dictionary of Psychology by Andrew M. Colman
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