Georg Ledderhose
Georg Otto Ledderhose was a German surgeon, professor and pioneering traumatologist. Born in Bockenheim, Frankfurt am Main, he studied medicine at the University of Strasbourg and the University of Göttingen. Ledderhose is best known for identifying and describing Ledderhose's disease, a condition affecting the plantar fascia of the foot. He made significant contributions to the fields of surgery, traumatology, and orthopedics throughout his career.
Biography
Early life
He was born in the Bockenheim district of Frankfurt am Main. His father was the politician and university rector Karl Ledderhose and his mother was Wilhelmine Justine Charlotte. Wilhelmine's father was Johann Georg Heinrich Pfeiffer, the third son of Johann Jakob Pfeiffer, and brother of Burkhard Wilhelm, Carl Jonas, and Franz Georg Pfeiffer. Two of Ledderhose's uncles, the husbands of his mother's sisters, were the chemist Friedrich Wöhler and the jurist Otto Bähr, and another of his mother's sisters was the mother of the Prussian cavalry general Adolf von Deines. At the time of Georg's birth, his father Carl was serving as a magistrate in the Hessian municipal court, and by 1865, when Georg was only ten years old, Karl had risen to the rank of Electoral Finance minister. By 1871, Karl had been appointed vice president of the Prussian province of Alsace-Lorraine, as well as rector of the University of Strasbourg, and he would hold the latter position until 1887.Education
Ledderhose studied medicine at the University of Strasbourg under Georg Albert Lücke, as well as the University of Göttingen under his uncle Friedrich Wöhler. In 1876, while at Göttingen, Ledderhose was enjoying a dinner of lobster with his uncle Freidrich and his professor Felix Hoppe-Seyler, when his uncle suggested that he take the remains of the lobster back to the laboratory. Intrigued, Ledderhose did so, and after exposing the chitinous shells to several compounds, he realized that a concentrated solution of hydrochloric acid caused the shells to dissolve and leave a residue of crystals. Ledderhose later examined these crystals, and determining them to be a discovery new to science, christened them glycosamine.Career and later life
Ledderhose received his medical degree from the University of Strasbourg in 1880, after which he practiced surgery at the Hôpital Civil. In 1886, Ledderhose was sent from Strasbourg to Paris, along with other eminent European doctors, including Karl Theodor, Duke in Bavaria, to study the novel techniques of Dr. Louis Pasteur. In 1890, Ledderhose married Marie Caroline Pauline Emma Scharrer, great-granddaughter of the merchant, banker, and sometime burgermeister of Nuremberg. Emma's brother was the celebrated dramaturg and biographer Eduard Scharrer-Santen. They had two children:- Elisabeth
- Georg, who followed his father into medicine. The younger Georg and his wife Maria Freundlieb were the parents of the German art historian Lothar Ledderose.
Legacy
In addition to his work in discovering glucosamine, Ledderhose is perhaps most famous today for being the first to describe the condition of plantar fibromatosis in 1894, which is now known as Ledderhose's disease in his honor.Publications
- Über Glykosamin. Trübner, Straßburg 1880.
- Trübner, Straßburg 1885.
- Die chirurgischen Erkrankungen der Bauchdecken und die chirurgischen Krankheiten der Milz. Enke, Stuttgart 1890.
- Bergmann, Wiesbaden 1898.
- Die Arthritis deformans als Allgemeinerkrankungen. Trübner, Straßburg 1915.
- Chirurgie des Thorax und der Brustdrüse. Thieme, Leipzig 1920.
- Chirurgie der Wirbelsäule, des Rückenmarks, der Bauchdecken und des Beckens. Thieme, Leipzig 1921.
- Enke, Stuttgart 1921.