- Source: Max Nonne
Max Nonne (13 January 1861, Hamburg – 12 August 1959, Hamburg) was a German neurologist.
Biography
Max Nonne received his early education at the Gelehrtenschule des Johanneums in Hamburg, and later studied medicine at the universities of Heidelberg, Freiburg, and Berlin, obtaining his doctorate in 1884. After graduation, he served as an assistant in the Heidelberg medical clinic under Wilhelm Heinrich Erb (1840-1921) and in the surgical clinic in Kiel under Johannes Friedrich August von Esmarch (1823-1908), then in 1889 returned to Hamburg as a neurologist. During the same year, he became head physician in the department of internal medicine at the Red Cross Hospital. In 1896 he was appointed director of neurology at Eppendorf Hospital, Hamburg.
Nonne became a titular professor of neurology in 1913, and in 1919 began teaching classes in neurology at the newly founded University of Hamburg, where in 1925 he became professor ordinarius. Here he worked with Alfons Maria Jakob (1884-1931).
Max Nonne was one of the four physicians asked to investigate Vladimir Ilich Lenin during the Russian leaders' final disease.
See also
Friedrich Meggendorfer
Associated eponyms
Nonne-Apelt reaction: Sensitive method for demonstrating fibrin-globulin in liquor cerebrospinalis.
Nonne-Milroy-Meige disease: Chronic familial lymphoedema of the limbs.
Selected writings
Syphilis und Nervensystem. Berlin, 1902; fifth edition – 1924. (Translated into English and Spanish).
Diagnose und Therapie der syphilogenen Erkrankungen des Zentralnervensystems. Halle, 1913. 47 pages.
Notes
References
Max Nonne at Who Named It
External links
Works by or about Max Nonne at the Internet Archive
Newspaper clippings about Max Nonne in the 20th Century Press Archives of the ZBW
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Max Nonne
- Hermann Oppenheim
- Idiopathic intracranial hypertension
- First Battle of Ypres
- List of neurologists and neurosurgeons
- Male hysteria
- Robert Wartenberg
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- Helene Nonné-Schmidt
- Johanneum Gymnasium