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Vladimir Betz

Russian anatomist and histologist (1834–1894) From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Vladimir Betz
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Vladimir Alexeyevich Betz or Volodymyr Oleksiyovych Betz (Russian: Владимир Алексеевич Бец; Ukrainian: Володи́мир Олексійович Бец; 26 April [O.S. 14 April] 183412 October [O.S. 30 September] 1894)[2] was a Russian anatomist and histologist of Ukrainian origin who served as a professor at Saint Vladimir University of Kiev.

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Biography

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Vladimir Betz was born in a small village of Tatarovschina. He began his studies in Nezhin, and later attended the 2nd Kiev Gymnasium, where he graduated in 1853. In 1860, he completed the Kiev University course in the Faculty of Medicine, earning his doctor's degree. Subsequently, he served as an assistant prosector in the anatomy department, and later worked as a dissector. From May 1861 to September 1862, he was sent abroad, where he studied and listened to lectures by professors Brücke, Ludwig, Bunsen, Kölliker, Kirchhoff and Helmholtz. Doctoral dissertation – "On blood circulation in the liver" (1863). From 1864 to 1867, he taught a course in human anatomy at the natural sciences and histology at the medical faculties, as well as special courses on the anatomy of the nervous system and analytical chemistry. In 1868 he was confirmed as an extraordinary professor, and in 1870 as an ordinary professor in the department of anatomy. For the preparation of preparations of the human brain, he was twice awarded medals (in 1870 at the All-Russian Manufacturing Exhibition and in 1873 at the World Exhibition in Vienna) and received a very flattering review of them from the famous anatomist Professor Hyrtl.

He took an active part in the public life of Kiev. One of the founders of the Kiev Natural Research Society. In 1890, Professor Betz left the post of head of the department of anatomy at the Saint Vladimir University and resigned. Remaining a consultant on nervous diseases at the Kiev Kirillov Hospital (Psychiatric Hospital named after Academician I. P. Pavlov), until the end of his days Betz worked as the chief physician of the South-Western Railway.

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Scientific activity

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He was the author of about 50 scientific papers. His main direction of scientific research was anatomy and histology of the central nervous system. In 1874, Betz described giant pyramidal neurons of the primary motor cortex of the brain, which later received the name Betz cells.[3] Vladimir is the founder of the doctrine of cytoarchitectonics of the brain. He developed an original method for making anatomical preparations and collected over 8,000 preparations of human and animal brains. Discovered the chromaffin reaction of the adrenal medulla. Studied embryogenesis and growth of human bones.

Director of the Anatomical Theater in Kiev. Full member of the Imperial Natural History Society, Imperial Nature Society, corresponding member of the Paris Anthropological Society, authorized member of the Leipzig Ethnographic Museum.

Vladimir Betz was an unsurpassed master of making anatomical preparations. Under a microscope, he made the thinnest cuts into the cells. For a collection of brain preparations, which was exhibited in St. Petersburg in 1870, he was awarded a silver medal. The unique collection was valued at 7,000 Austrian guilders, but the owner categorically refused to sell it, and later donated it to Kiev University.[4]

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Awards

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Vladimir Betz headstone at the Vydubychi Monastery, Kyiv, Ukraine. The inscription reads: "To the initiator of studies of the Central Nervous System, the professor of anatomy of the Kyiv University, Vladimir Alekseyevich Betz. 1834-1894. Grateful Ukrainian morphologists."

Brain tissue preparations made by Betz were awarded medals twice – at the All-Russian manufacturing exhibition in 1870 and at Vienna World Exposition of 1873.[5]

Essays

  • "On blood circulation in the liver" (dissertation for the degree of Doctor of Medicine, Kiev, 1863);
  • "A new method for studying the human central nervous system" ("Notes of the Kiev Society of Naturalists", 1870 and "Archiv von Max Schultze", 1870);
  • "On the grouping of convolutions of the human brain" ("Notes of the Kiev Society of Naturalists", 1871);
  • "Das Gesetz der Vertheilung der Gyri und Sulci der menschlichen Gehirnoberfläche" ("Sitzber. der Wiener Psychiatren");
  • "Two centers in the human cerebral cortex" ("Moscow Medical Bulletin", 1875);
  • "Anatomy of the surface of the human brain, with an atlas and 86 tables" ("University News", 1883);
  • "Historical figures of South-Western Russia" (Kiev, 1883, together with Professor B. A. Antonovich).
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References

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