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Paul Hoffmann (neurophysiologist)

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Nationality
  
German

Role
  
Neurophysiologist

Fields
  
Neurophysiology

Name
  
Paul Hoffmann

Died
  
1962

Born
  
1 July 1884 Dorpat, Estonia (
1884-07-01
)

Institutions
  
University of Wurzburg Director of Institute of Physiology at University of Freiburg-im-Breisgau

Alma mater
  
University of Leipzig University of Marburg University of Berlin

Known for
  
Describing Hoffmann's sign for assessment of nerve regeneration and success of nerve sutures.

Education
  
Humboldt University of Berlin

Paul Hoffmann (July 1, 1884 – March 9, 1962) was a German neurophysiologist and is known for describing Hoffmann's sign.

Contents

Medical career

He was born in Dorpat, Estonia where his father was professor in Internal Medicine. He went on to study medicine in Universities of Leizpig, Marburg and Berlin from where he received his medical degree in 1909. In 1911 he was appointed as assistant to Max von Frey at Wurzburg University. He published 32 articles prior to beginning of World War I and during the war worked for several German field hospitals in France and military hospital at Wurzburg.

His early worked mainly focused on nerve action potentials and electrophysiology of nerves. He was a prolific writer and researcher and has been hailed by some as father of modern German neurophysiology

In 1917, he was appointed as Associate Professor at University of Berlin and in 1924 he was made director of Institute of Physiology at University of Freiburg-im-Breisgau which was completely destroyed in an aerial raid in 1944 but continued his work later in a new building until he retired in 1954.

He received honorary degrees form Humboldt University of Berlin and University of Zurich.

Hoffmann's sign

It was in March and August 1915 just few months before Jules Tinel when Hoffmann published two articles in journal Medizinische Klinic describing a method of evaluating success of nerve sutures and nerve regeneration. The sign termed as (H- sign) Hoffmann's sign was elicited by tapping distal to the site of injured nerve which produced tingling sensation, the sensation was neither permanent nor severe. In October 1915, Jules Tinel described the same phenomenon in French "le signe de fourmillement".

Hoffman did not get enough credit in spite of being the first one to describe this sign because after the end of the war, Tinel's research gained more popularity and in all regions outside Germany where the sign is known as Tinel's sign.

References

Paul Hoffmann (neurophysiologist) Wikipedia