Werner August Hagedorn (2 July 1831, in Westhausen – 20 June 1894, in Magdeburg) was a German surgeon.
Werner Hagedorn | |
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Born | Werner August Hagedorn 2 July 1831 Westhausen, Germany |
Died | 20 June 1894 Magdeburg, Saxony-Anhalt, Germany | (aged 62)
Alma mater | Humboldt University of Berlin |
Occupation | Surgeon |
He studied medicine at the University of Berlin, where his instructors included Johannes Peter Müller and Bernhard von Langenbeck. In 1854 he received his doctorate with the thesis De forcipe Schoelleriana obstetricia. From 1855 he worked as an assistant at the hospital in Magdeburg-Altstadt, where in 1863 he was appointed head of the surgical department.[1][2]
He is credited for introducing Listerian antiseptic methods at the Magdeburg-Altstadt hospital.[2] His name is associated with the "Hagedorn needle", which is a curved surgical needle flattened on the sides.[3] He was the author of Frisches getrocknetes Moos (Sphagnum), ein gutes Verbandmaterial ("Fresh dried sphagnum, a good dressing material"; 1883), an article published in Langenbeck's Archiv.[4]
References
edit- ^ A Reference Handbook of the Medical Sciences by Albert Henry Buck, Thomas Lathrop Stedman
- ^ a b Hagedorn, Werner August Magdeburger Biographisches Lexikon, Magdeburg 2002
- ^ A practical medical dictionary by Thomas Lathrop Stedman
- ^ Frisches getrocknetes Moos OCLC WorldCat