Kienbock-Preiser syndrome - meaning and definition. What is Kienbock-Preiser syndrome
Diclib.com
ChatGPT AI Dictionary
Enter a word or phrase in any language 👆
Language:

Translation and analysis of words by ChatGPT artificial intelligence

On this page you can get a detailed analysis of a word or phrase, produced by the best artificial intelligence technology to date:

  • how the word is used
  • frequency of use
  • it is used more often in oral or written speech
  • word translation options
  • usage examples (several phrases with translation)
  • etymology

What (who) is Kienbock-Preiser syndrome - definition

AUSTRIAN RADIOLOGIST (1871-1953)
Robert Kienbock; Robert Kienboeck; Kienböck, Robert

Peter Preiser         
PROFESSOR OF MOLECULAR GENETICS AND CELL BIOLOGY AT THE NANYANG TECHNOLOGICAL UNIVERSITY
Preiser, Peter
Peter Preiser is chair of the School of Biological Sciences and a professor of molecular genetics and cell biology at the Nanyang Technological University (NTU) in Singapore. He specialises in the study of the malaria parasite and is head of the team at NTU that has discovered a route to a possible vaccine for the disease.
Robert Kienböck         
Robert Kienböck (11 January 1871 – 8 September 1953) was an Austrian radiologist who was a native of Vienna.
Reye's syndrome         
SYNDROME CHARACTERIZED BY ACUTE BRAIN DAMAGE AND LIVER FUNCTION PROBLEMS
Reyes Syndrome; Reye Syndrome; Reye's Syndrome; Reyes syndrome; Reye’s Syndrome; Reye hepatocerebral syndrome; Rye syndrome; Reye s syndrome; Reye's s syndrome; Reye's syndrome; Reye’s syndrome
['re?z, 'r??z]
¦ noun a life-threatening metabolic disorder in young children, of uncertain cause.
Origin
1960s: named after the Australian paediatrician Ralph D. K. Reye.

Wikipedia

Robert Kienböck

Robert Kienböck (11 January 1871 – 8 September 1953) was an Austrian radiologist who was a native of Vienna.

In 1895 he earned his medical doctorate at the University of Vienna, and spent the next year abroad (London and Paris). He returned to Vienna as an assistant to Leopold von Schrötter (1837–1908), a laryngologist, and began working in the new science of radiology. Several years later, he became head of the radiological department at Vienna General Hospital. In 1926 he became an associate professor of radiology.

In June 1923, along with Guido Holzknecht (1872-1931), he was co-founder of the Wiener Gesellschaft für Röntgenkunde (Vienna Radiology Society). He was elected president of the Österreichische Gesellschaft für Röntgenkunde (Austrian Radiology Society) in 1934 and honorary president of that body after the Second World War. With Holzknecht, he published the two-part Röntgenologie. Eine Revision ihrer technischen Einrichtungen und praktische Methoden (Roentgenology. A review of its technical facilities and practical methods).

Kienböck was a pioneer in the use of x-ray technology for medical diagnosis and therapy. He specialized in research of skeletal diseases and its treatment through radiology. In 1910 he described a disorder which consisted of breakdown of the lunate bone in the wrist. He called the disorder "lunatomalacia", which is now known as Kienböck's disease. Kienböck published his findings in a treatise titled Über traumatische Malazie des Mondbeins und ihre Folgezustände (Traumatic malacia of the lunate and its consequences).