Kreutzberg G W, Klatzo I, Kleihues P
Max Planck Institute for Psychiatry, Department of Neuromorphology, Martinsried, Germany.
Brain Pathol. 1992 Oct;2(4):363-71. doi: 10.1111/j.1750-3639.1992.tb00712.x.
Oskar Vogt (1870-1955) was a prominent German neurologist and neuroanatomist with a strong interest in the pathogenesis of brain diseases. Together with his wife Cécile (1875-1962), he published landmark papers on the cyto- and myelo-architecture of the brain and the functional anatomy of the basal ganglia. He developed the concept of pathoclisis, i.e., the selective vulnerability of specific neuronal populations in the CNS. In the 1920's, Vogt created a multi-disciplinary brain research institute, the Kaiser-Wilhelm-Institut für Hirnforschung in Berlin-Buch. After Lenin's death in 1924, Oskar Vogt was called to Moscow where he formed a new brain research institute, with the main purpose to investigate the revolutionary's brain. After being dismissed from office by the Nazi government in 1937, the Vogts continued their work in a privately funded institute in Neustadt, the Black Forest.
奥斯卡·沃格特(1870 - 1955)是一位杰出的德国神经学家和神经解剖学家,对脑部疾病的发病机制有着浓厚的兴趣。他与妻子塞西尔(1875 - 1962)共同发表了关于大脑细胞和髓鞘结构以及基底神经节功能解剖学的具有里程碑意义的论文。他提出了病理易感性的概念,即中枢神经系统中特定神经元群体的选择性易损性。20世纪20年代,沃格特在柏林-布赫创建了一个多学科脑研究所——凯撒·威廉脑研究所。1924年列宁去世后,奥斯卡·沃格特被召至莫斯科,在那里他组建了一个新的脑研究所,主要目的是研究这位革命家的大脑。1937年被纳粹政府解职后,沃格特夫妇在黑森林地区新施塔特的一个私人资助研究所继续他们的工作。