Literature DB >> 27035838

German Emergency Care in Neurosurgery and Military Neurology during World War II, 1939-1945.

Frank W Stahnisch1.   

Abstract

A critical analysis of the historical involvement of neurology and neurosurgery in military emergency care services enables us to better contextualize and appreciate the development of modern neurology at large. Wartime neurosurgery and civil brain science during the German Nazi period tightly coalesced in examining the specific injury types, which military neurosurgeons such as Wilhelm Toennis, Klaus Joachim Zuelch, and Georg Merrem encountered and treated based on their neurophysiological understanding gained from earlier peacetime research. Collaborative associations with Dr. Toennis in particular proved to be highly beneficial to other military neurologists and neurosurgeons during World War II and beyond. This article also discusses the prewar developments and considers the fate of German neurosurgeons and military neurologists after the war. The envisaged dynamic concepts of fast action, reaction, and recycling, which contemporary physicians had intensively studied in the preceding scientific experiments in their neurophysiological laboratories, had already been introduced into neurological surgery during the interwar period. In retrospect, World War II emergency rescue units greatly strengthened military operations through an active process of 'recycling' indispensable army personnel. Neurosurgical emergency chains thereby introduced another decisive step in the modernization of warfare, in that they increased the momentum of military mobility in the field. Notwithstanding the violence of warfare and the often inhumane ways in which such knowledge in the field of emergency neurology was gained, the protagonists among the group of experts in military neurology and neurosurgery strongly contributed to the postwar clinical neuroscience community in Germany. In differing political pretexts, this became visible in both East Germany and West Germany after the war, while the specific military and political conditions under which this knowledge of emergency medicine was obtained have largely been forgotten.
© 2016 S. Karger AG, Basel.

Mesh:

Year:  2016        PMID: 27035838     DOI: 10.1159/000442650

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Front Neurol Neurosci        ISSN: 0300-5186


  3 in total

Review 1.  [Neuroscientists at the Kaiser Wilhelm Institute for Brain Research in the "Third Reich": Oskar Vogt-Hugo Spatz-Wilhelm Tönnis].

Authors:  Michael Martin; Axel Karenberg; Heiner Fangerau
Journal:  Nervenarzt       Date:  2020-02       Impact factor: 1.214

Review 2.  [The two CVs of Klaus Joachim Zülch (1910-1988)].

Authors:  Michael Martin; Heiner Fangerau; Axel Karenberg
Journal:  Nervenarzt       Date:  2020-02       Impact factor: 1.214

Review 3.  [Neurologists and neuroscientists during the "Third Reich": attempt at an assessment].

Authors:  Axel Karenberg; Heiner Fangerau; Michael Martin
Journal:  Nervenarzt       Date:  2020-02       Impact factor: 1.214

  3 in total

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