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Max Saenger

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Name
  
Max Saenger


Education
  
Leipzig University

Max Saenger httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Died
  
March 14, 1903, Prague, Czech Republic

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Max Saenger (German: Max Sänger) (March 14, 1853, Bayreuth – January 12, 1903, Prague) was a German obstetrician and gynecologist who was a native of Bayreuth.

Contents

He studied medicine at the University of Leipzig, then continued with graduate studies in OB/GYN and pathology under Carl Siegmund Franz Credé (1819–1892). He later became a professor of obstetrics and gynecology at Leipzig, and in 1890 was appointed professor of OB/GYN at the German University in Prague. In 1894 he co-founded the journal Monatsschrift für Geburtshilfe und Gynäkologie.

In 1882 he introduced the practice of sutural closure of the uterus following Caesarean section operations. The previous autumn, Ferdinand Adolf Kehrer (1837-1914) performed the first lower segment Caesarean section in Europe. Sänger's contribution preserved the mother's uterus and helped reduce the chance of infection. Afterwards, Kehrer and other surgeons adopted Sänger's methodology.

Sänger used silver and silk thread as suture material. Silver sutures had been introduced into medicine by the American gynecologist James Marion Sims (1813-1883).

Sänger was originally Jewish, but later converted to Lutheranism. Despite his conversion, he suffered discrimination due to his Jewish background.

Terminology

  • Saenger's suture: the closure of the uterine wound in Caesarean section by eight or ten deep silver wire sutures, and the use of twenty or more superficial stitches taken through the peritoneum.
  • Saenger's operation: Cesarean section followed by careful closure of the uterine wound by three tiers of sutures. Also described as a Caesarean section in which the uterus is taken out through a long abdominal cut before the fetus is removed.
  • Literature

  • The Internet Journal of Gynecology and Obstetrics Max Sänger (1853–1903): An Historical Note on Uterine Sutures in Caesarean Section
  • The Illustrated American Medical Dictionary (1938)
  • NCBI National Library of Medicine; Max Sänger
  • References

    Max Saenger Wikipedia