Carl Posner

Carl Posner (16 December 1854 – 20 December 1928) was a German urologist.

Posner was born in Berlin. He studied natural sciences and medicine at several German universities, receiving his PhD at Leipzig in 1875 and his medical doctorate at Giessen in 1880. Afterwards, he settled into a medical practice in Berlin, and in the meantime, received training in urology as a private assistant to Ernst Fürstenheim (1836–1904). In 1889 he obtained his habilitation, and shortly afterwards worked as a lecturer at Friedrich-Wilhelms-Universität in Berlin, where in 1903 he became an associate professor of internal medicine.[1] He died in Berlin, aged 74.

He is remembered for his pioneer work involving testicular puncture biopsy in the investigation of infertility in humans,[2] as well as for the eponymous "Posner test", a means used for determining the presence of albumin in urine.[3]

Selected works

In addition to his works associated with genitourinary subjects, he published a biography on pathologist Rudolf Virchow (1921) and an important study involving the lamellibranch gill, titled "Ueber den Bau der Najadenkieme. Ein Beitrag zur vergleichenden Histiologie und Morphologie der Lamellibranchiaten" (1875).[4][5] His other written efforts include:

He was an editor of the journals "Berliner klinischen Wochenschrift" and "Zeitschrift für Urologie".[1]

References

  1. ^ a b Biografie, Carl Posner Wissenschaftliche Sammlungen an der Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin
  2. ^ Role of fine needle aspiration cytology (FNAC) of testes in male infertility Indian Journal of Urology
  3. ^ Annual of the Universal Medical Sciences, Volume 1
  4. ^ Ergebnisse Der Physiologie, Biologischen Chemie und ..., Volume 2, Part 2 edited by Leon Asher, Karl Spiro
  5. ^ Gills of Lamellibranch Mollusca Exeter College, Oxford. (With Plates, IV, V, VI, VII.)]
  6. ^ Most widely held works about Carl Posner WorldCat Identities