Joseph Barth (28 October 1746 – 7 April 1818) was a Maltese-born Austrian ophthalmologist.[1] He is believed to have been the first professor of ophthalmology.[2]

Joseph Barth
Joseph Barth (1746-1818) (Heinrich Friedrich Füger)
Born(1746-10-28)28 October 1746
Died7 April 1818(1818-04-07) (aged 71)
NationalityAustrian
EducationUniversity of Vienna (M.D., 1772)
Scientific career
FieldsOphthalmology
InstitutionsUniversity of Vienna
Doctoral advisorAnton von Störck
Doctoral studentsGeorg Joseph Beer
Johann Adam Schmidt
Georg Prochaska

Education

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He studied at the Anatomical and Surgical School at Sacra Infermeria in Valletta (Malta), the Santo Spirito Hospital in Rome (Italy), the University of Vienna (Austria). He earned his medical doctorate from Vienna in 1772.

Career

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He was appointed Public Teacher in Ophthalmology and Anatomy (1773), Professor of Ophthalmology and Anatomy (1774) and Oculist and Professor of Physiology (1786) at the University of Vienna; he was nominated Royal Counsellor (1774) and appointed oculist to Emperor Joseph II (1776); he retired in 1791 but maintained the post of personal imperial physician and ophthalmologist until his death.

Achievements

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Joseph Barth was to gain renown in ophthalmologic practice and to occupy the first Chair of Ophthalmology in Europe, at the Medical University of Vienna. His appointment to the post by the Empress Maria Theresa of Austria was made in consideration of his "special skill in eye diseases as well as his aptitude in finer anatomy". The professorship occupied by Barth remained the leader in ophthalmology with the subsequent professorship being instituted in Berlin only in 1866.

In Malta the professorship in ophthalmology was only established in 1880 being incumbent by Professor Lawrence Manche. Barth also opened a private nursing home and the first public eye clinic in the Vienna General Hospital in 1784, wherein he operated on cases of cataract. He apparently designed the original version of the "Beer's knife" that was subsequently modified and popularised by his student.[3] His clinical renown led to his appointment as Imperial Oculist after he successfully treated Kaiser Joseph II of a stubborn "ophthalmitis".

Barth was very much a clinical teacher and was responsible for the training of several renowned physicians, notably Joseph Ehrenritter, Johann Adam Schmidt, Georg Joseph Beer, Georg Prochaska, Jacob Santerelli, G.B. Quadri, and Pietro Magistretti. Prochaska and Beer succeeded him in the position of Chair of Ophthalmology.[4] He also established an Anatomical Museum that housed an assembly of 1576 specimens, some prepared by Barth himself. He also founded a medical library that contained 1500 volumes. Barth did not publish extensively preferring clinical teaching.

His publications included an anatomical work on myology Anfangsgrunde der Muskellehre (Vienna, 1786, 2nd ed. 1819) and an operative text on cataract removal Etwas uber die Ausziehung des graven Staars fur den genubten Operateur (Vienna, 1797, Salzburg, 1797). In 1827, Dr Stefano Zerafa described Joseph Barth as "a man of great merits, Maltese citizen, Chief Physician and Counsellor to Her Sacred Majesty, Professor of Sublime Anatomy and Physiology in the Academy of Vienna, undoubtedly the first among ophthalmologists."

References

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  1. ^ Damato, Francis Joseph (1966). "The first chair of ophthalmology: a biographical sketch of Joseph Barth". St. Luke's Hospital Gazette. 1 (1): 10–13.
  2. ^ Littlewood, Ross (1988). "Who Remembers the First Professor of Ophthalmology?". Australian and New Zealand Journal of Ophthalmology. 16 (2): 133–135. doi:10.1111/j.1442-9071.1988.tb01262.x. ISSN 1440-1606. PMID 3052522.
  3. ^ Frothingham, Geo. E. (1888-10-13). "SOME OBSERVATIONS CONCERNING THE EXTRACTION OF CATARACT WITHOUT AN IRIDECTOMY, AND THE USE OF THE BANDAGE IN THE AFTER-TREATMENT.: Read in the Section on Ophthalmology at the Thirty-ninth Annual Meeting of the American Medical Association, May 9, 1888". Journal of the American Medical Association. XI (15): 505. doi:10.1001/jama.1888.02400670001001. ISSN 0002-9955.
  4. ^ "History of Viennese Ophthalmology". Medical University of Vienna. Retrieved 2022-01-18.
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