Fritz Lange (21 June 1864 in Dessau – 19 November 1952 in Wackersberg) was a German orthopedic surgeon.
He studied medicine at the universities of Jena, Leipzig and Munich, receiving his doctorate in 1892. He furthered his education in Rostock and Strasbourg, where he was pupil of Otto Wilhelm Madelung. In 1895 he studied orthopedics under Adolf Lorenz in Vienna, and during the following year, obtained his habilitation for orthopedic surgery. In 1908 he became a full professor of orthopedics at the University of Munich.[1][2]
In 1909 he was named president of the Deutsche Gesellschaft für Orthopädische Chirurgie (German Society for Orthopedic Surgery). He was an editor of the periodical "Münchener Medizinischen Wochenschrift" (Munich Medical Weekly).[1]
He made contributions in his research of congenital hip dislocation, torticollis, scoliosis and spinal tuberculosis.[1] He is remembered for his pioneer work with tendon transplants and artificial ligaments (made of silk).[3][4]
Selected works
edit- Chirurgie und orthopädie im kindesalter, with Hans Spitzy, 1910 – Surgery and orthopedics in childhood.
- Lehrbuch der Orthopädie, 1914 – Textbook of orthopedics.
- Die behandlung der knochenbrüche durch den praktischen arzt, 1926 – On treatment of bones.
- Die epidemische kinderlähmung, 1930 – The polio epidemic.
- Die sprache des menschlichen antlitzes; eine wissenschaftliche physiognomik und ihre praktische verwertung im leben und in der kunst, 1937 – Language of the human face; scientific physiognomy and its practical utilization in life and art.[5]
References
edit- ^ a b c Lange, Fritz in: Neue Deutsche Biographie 13 (1982), S. 557.
- ^ Geschichte der Unfallchirurgie by F. Povacz
- ^ The ACL-Deficient Knee: A Problem Solving Approach edited by Vicente Sanchis-Alfonso, Joan Carles Monllau
- ^ Memphis Medical Monthly, Volume 30, Issue 11
- ^ Most widely held works about Fritz Lange WorldCat Identities