Franz Joseph Julius Wilbrand

Franz Joseph Julius Wilbrand (6 November 1811 in Giessen 6 July 1894 in Giessen) was a German forsensic physician. He was the father of chemist Julius Wilbrand (1839–1906) and ophthalmologist Hermann Wilbrand (1851–1935).

He studied medicine at the University of Giessen, where his teachers included his father, anatomist Johann Bernhard Wilbrand (1779–1846), and his uncle, obstetrician Ferdinand von Ritgen. After graduation (1833), he remained at Giessen as an assistant at the surgical hospital. In 1840 he became an associate professor, and three years later, attained a full professorship in forensic medicine and hygiene at the university.[1]

He was among the first physicians to use creosote for treatment of scrofula,[1] publishing the treatise Beiträge zur Würdigung der arzneilichen Wirkung des Kreosot's (1834) as a result.[2] In 1840 he coined the term "horseshoe-shaped commissure of Wernekinck" as a name for the decussation of the brachium conjunctivum.[3]

Selected works

References

  1. 1 2 Leopoldina, Volume 30 edited by Dietrich Georg Kieser, Carl Gustav Carus, Wilhelm Friedrich Georg Behn, etc.
  2. Bibliotheca medico-chirurgica et anatomico-physiologica by Wilhelm Engelmann, Theodor Christian Friedrich Enslin.
  3. The horseshoe-shaped commissure of Wernekinck Cerebellum. 2014 Feb;13(1):113-20.
  4. Most widely held works by Julius Wilbrand WorldCat Identities
  5. Wilbrand, Franz Joseph Julius Pagel: Biographisches Lexikon hervorragender Ärzte des neunzehnten Jahrhunderts. Berlin, Wien 1901, Sp. 1851.
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