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Ernst Georg Ferdinand Küster

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Name
  
Ernst Ferdinand


Role
  
Surgeon

Ernst Georg Ferdinand Kuster

Died
  
April 19, 1930, Berlin, Germany

Ernst Georg Ferdinand Küster (2 November 1839 – 19 April 1930) was a German surgeon born in Wollin.

He studied medicine in Bonn, Würzburg and Berlin, and following graduation worked as an assistant to Robert Ferdinand Wilms (1824-1880) at the Bethanien Hospital in Berlin. In 1875 he became habilitated for surgery, and from 1879 was chief physician and an associate professor at Berlin's Augusta Hospital. In 1890 he was appointed professor of surgery at the University of Marburg, later returning as a surgeon to Berlin (1907).

In 1872 Küster was a founding member of the German Society of Surgery, being chosen as its chairman in 1903.

He is credited for developing the foundation of modern radical mastoidectomy for treatment of chronic ear disease. Küster's radical mastoid operation is described as an extension of the simple mastoidectomy introduced by otologist Hermann Schwartze (1837-1910).

Selected publications

  • Die Chirurgie der Nieren, der Harnleiter und der Nebennieren. (Surgery of the kidney, ureter and the adrenal glands); Enke, Stuttgart 1896-1902, 2.Bd.
  • Geschichte der neueren deutschen Chirurgie. (History of modern German surgery); Enke, Stuttgart 1915.
  • Note: He is not to be confused with Ernst Küster (1874-1953), a professor of botany at the University of Giessen.
  • References

    Ernst Georg Ferdinand Küster Wikipedia