Virginia H. Rogers Professor of Pediatric Infectious Diseases, Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine, Chicago, Illinois 60611.
J Pediatric Infect Dis Soc. 2017 Nov 24;6(4):376-379. doi: 10.1093/jpids/piw063.
From 1908 to 1929, Clemens von Pirquet was one of the world's most acclaimed pediatricians. Von Pirquet (1874-1929) trained at Vienna's Universitäts Kinderklinic under Theodor Escherich, the first Pediatric Infectious Diseases physician [1], and became the first Professor and Chair of Pediatrics at Johns Hopkins in 1909. He then succeeded his mentor Escherich as Professor and Chair of Pediatrics in Vienna, the most prestigious European pediatric position, when Escherich died unexpectedly in 1911. He held that position in Vienna until his shocking double suicide at age 54 with his wife in 1929. Von Pirquet's pioneering contributions from 1903 to 1910 related to host reactions to foreign substances, providing much of the foundation for modern "Immunology". In 1905, he and his student Bela Schick described and named "serum sickness" in children administered animal antiserum. He recognized that animal antiserum resulted in both protection against an infection but also sensitization (sometimes with serious or fatal consequences), ie, that immune responses caused some diseases. In 1906, he proposed the term "allergy" for the altered reactivity induced by what he termed an "allergen", a foreign substance. He recognized that sensitization to an allergen leads to accelerated responses on subsequent allergen administration, analogous to differences between primary and subsequent smallpox vaccine responses. In 1908, von Pirquet presented his invention, the "tuberculin skin test", recognizing its ability to identify individuals with previous tuberculosis infection, then the most prevalent infectious disease. This led to the new understanding that many or most tuberculosis-infected individuals are asymptomatic but at risk for future active disease, introducing the concept of "latent tuberculosis". Von Pirquet was a consummate pediatrician-scientist, translating scientific discoveries directly into improved care of children, and he also pioneered study of the social, nutritional, and public health aspects of pediatrics, especially during and after World War I.
从 1908 年到 1929 年, Clemens von Pirquet 是世界上最受赞誉的儿科医生之一。von Pirquet(1874-1929 年)曾在维也纳的 Universitäts Kinderklinic 接受 Theodor Escherich 的培训,Escherich 是第一位儿科传染病医生[1],并于 1909 年成为约翰霍普金斯大学的第一任儿科教授和主席。1911 年,他的导师 Escherich 意外去世后,他接替 Escherich 成为维也纳儿科教授和主席,这是欧洲最负盛名的儿科职位。直到 1929 年,他与妻子令人震惊地双双自杀,享年 54 岁,他一直担任该职位。von Pirquet 于 1903 年至 1910 年期间的开创性贡献与宿主对外来物质的反应有关,为现代“免疫学”奠定了基础。1905 年,他和他的学生 Bela Schick 在给儿童注射动物抗血清后描述并命名了“血清病”。他认识到,动物抗血清既能预防感染,又能致敏(有时会产生严重或致命的后果),即免疫反应会导致一些疾病。1906 年,他提出了“过敏”一词来描述他所称的“过敏原”引起的改变的反应性。他认识到,对过敏原的致敏会导致随后给予过敏原时加速反应,类似于初种和随后接种天花疫苗反应之间的差异。1908 年,von Pirquet 提出了他的发明,即“结核菌素皮肤试验”,该试验能够识别以前感染过结核病的个体,当时结核病是最常见的传染病。这导致了一个新的理解,即许多或大多数感染结核病的人无症状,但有未来发生活动性疾病的风险,引入了“潜伏性结核病”的概念。von Pirquet 是一位完美的儿科医生-科学家,他将科学发现直接转化为儿童护理的改善,他还开创了儿科社会、营养和公共卫生方面的研究,特别是在第一次世界大战期间和之后。