Otto Herbert Wolff

Last updated

Otto Herbert Wolff
Otto Herbert Wolff.jpg
Otto Wolff being awarded James Spence medal.
Born(1920-01-10)10 January 1920
Died27 April 2010(2010-04-27) (aged 90)
Nationality German
Education Peterhouse, Cambridge, Cambridge University
Known for lipoprotein electrophoresis, recognition of abetalipoproteinaemia.
Awards CBE, Dawson Williams Memorial Prize, James Spence Medal
Scientific career
Fields Pediatrics, Biomedical science
Institutions St Olave's Hospital, University of Birmingham, Great Ormond Street Hospital, University of London

Otto Herbert Wolff, CBE , FRCP (born 10 January 1920 in Hamburg, died 27 April 2010) was a German born medical scientist, paediatrician and was the Nuffield Professor of Child Health at Great Ormond Street Hospital. [1] Wolff was notable for being one of the first paediatricians in Britain to set up a clinic for obese children. Later research into plasma lipids with Harold Salt pioneered the techniques of lipoprotein electrophoresis. He later conducted research into the role of lipid disturbance in childhood as a precursor of coronary artery disease and his recognition in 1960 of the rare condition of abetalipoproteinaemia. [2] [3] Wolff was also co-discoverer of the Edwards syndrome in abnormal chromosomes. [1]

Contents

Life

Wolff was born the younger of two boys. [4] Wolff's British father, Herbert Arnold Jacob Wolff, was a GP, [3] who was born in Manchester to a British mother and his mother was Anna Samson, was the daughter of a lawyer. Wolff therefore had dual nationality. Herbert Wolff was a doctor, who served in the German Army during World War I, and during the interwar period, lived as a comfortable family in Germany. [4]

Wolff's early schooling took place in Hamburg, and despite his Jewish background, was well received by his classmates. [4] However, when he turned 16, Wolff was sent to London to study at a Cram school, so that he could earn a place at Cambridge University to study Medicine, a position his brother Heinz already held. [3] In 1937, the whole family emigrated to England, but upon arriving, his father realised that his medical degree from the University of Strasbourg was not recognised in the UK. [4] So Herbert Arnold Jacob Wolff studied Medicine at School of Medical Sciences, University of Manchester while both his sons studied Medicine in Cambridge. [3] Wolff earned a place at Peterhouse college. [5]

Career

Wolff started his clinical career at University College Hospital, [3] that had to be evacuated to Cardiff due to the Blitz and qualified in medicine in 1943, [5] and then held a number of junior posts at St Olave's Hospital in London. [3]

In 1944, close to the end of World War II, Wolff joined the Royal Army Medical Corps, attaining the rank of Captain, and was in charge of a smallpox hospital. [3] When the theatre moved to Italy, Wolff found he was responsible for the caring of Italian prisoners of war. [4] When Wolff found that a prisoner was ill, they would be allowed home to their families, and Wolff found it was hard to maintain a doubtful view when ailments were often fictitious. [4]

During 1947, Wolff was demobilised. [3] When returning from war, Wolff had a chance meeting with a senior doctor, that resulted in Wolff taking a position at the University of Birmingham to train in paediatrics. Working under the consultant Sir Leonard Parsons, Wolff become a registrar. [3] In 1951, Wolff started work at the University of Birmingham becoming a lecturer in the Department of Child Health. [5] Wolf finished his academic career at Birmingham University as a Reader under Professor Sir Douglas Hubble. [2] During the period while he was attending the university, Wolff received laboratory training and the scientific basis of medicine. He discovered Abetalipoproteinemia, a disorder of blood lipids, that interferes with the normal absorption of fat and fat-soluble vitamins from food, and designed new special diets for babies with phenylketonuria, an inborn error of metabolism that results in decreased metabolism of the amino acid phenylalanine [3] Wolff also provided the first description of the genetic disorder, i.e. the chromosomal abnormality that leads to Edwards syndrome. [3] [4] [5] In 1960, Wolff along with several other co-authors wrote a paper on the condition. [6]

In 1965, Wolff moved to London and was appointed the second Nuffield Professor of Child Health at the Institute of Child Health and consultant paediatrician at Great Ormond Street Hospital and the University of London. The previous Nuffield Professor was Sir Alan Moncrieff. [3] [4] Wolff was the first trained scientist to work within pediatrics, in a clinical chair in the UK, and used the position to push the scientific based treatment of babies and the very young. [4] During his time at the institute, Wolff turned was as essentially a collection of pre-war cottage hospitals into a world class centre for children. [3]

Wolf's work after World War II helped to establish the formation of the Royal College of Paediatrics and Child Health. [5]

Awards and honours

Wolff was Knighted in 1985 with a CBE. [5]

In 1985 Wolff was awarded the Dawson Williams Memorial Prize from the British Medical Association, and in 1986 the medal of the Association Française pour le Dépistage et le Prévention des Maladies Métaboliques et des Handicaps de l’Enfant. [5] 1987 brought the Harding Award from the Action Research for the Crippled Child, later the Action Medical Research. [5] Wolff was awarded the prestigious James Spence Medal in 1988, by the Royal College of Paediatrics and Child Health. [2]

Bibliography

These are some of Otto Wolff's most important papers.

Related Research Articles

<span class="mw-page-title-main">June Lloyd, Baroness Lloyd of Highbury</span> British paediatrician and life peer

June Kathleen Lloyd, Baroness Lloyd of Highbury, DBE, FRCP, FRCP Edin, FRCGP was a British paediatrician and, in retirement, a cross bench member of the House of Lords. June Lloyd was a determined advocate for children's health and was instrumental in the establishment of the Royal College of Paediatrics and Child Health. In 1996 the college gained its royal status. She was also known for discovering that the damage caused to patients by the rare metabolic disease oQ-betalipoproteinaemia, that could be avoided by the use of Vitamin E. She was also known for discovering the role of lipid metabolism in health and disease in childhood, which was original and difficult to investigate at that time.

David Southall is a British paediatrician who is an expert in international maternal and child hospital healthcare and in child protection including the diagnosis of the controversial Fabricated or Induced Illness, and who has performed significant research into Sudden Infant Death Syndrome (SIDS).

Derek Summerfield is an honorary senior lecturer at London's Institute of Psychiatry and a member of the Executive Committee of Transcultural Special Interest Group at the Royal College of Psychiatry. He is also an Honorary Fellow of the Egyptian Psychiatric Association. He has published around 150 papers and has made other contributions in medical and social sciences literature.

Sir James Calvert Spence, & Bar was an English paediatrician who was a pioneer in the field of social paediatrics. He was a founding member of the British Paediatric Association.

The Goulstonian Lectures are an annual lecture series given on behalf of the Royal College of Physicians in London. They began in 1639. The lectures are named for Theodore Goulston, who founded them with a bequest. By his will, dated 26 April 1632, he left £200 to the College of Physicians of London to found a lectureship, to be held in each year by one of the four youngest doctors of the college. These lectures were annually delivered from 1639, and have continued for more than three centuries. Up to the end of the 19th century, the spelling Gulstonian was often used. In many cases the lectures have been published.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Lumleian Lectures</span>

The Lumleian Lectures are a series of annual lectures started in 1582 by the Royal College of Physicians and currently run by the Lumleian Trust. The name commemorates John Lumley, 1st Baron Lumley, who with Richard Caldwell of the College endowed the lectures, initially confined to surgery, but now on general medicine. William Harvey did not announce his work on the circulation of the blood in the Lumleian Lecture for 1616 although he had some partial notes on the heart and blood which led to the discovery of the circulation ten years later. By that time ambitious plans for a full anatomy course based on weekly lectures had been scaled back to a lecture three times a year.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Andrew Haines</span>

Sir Andrew Paul Haines, FMedSci is a British epidemiologist and academic. He was the Director of the London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine from 2001 to 2010.

The Bradshaw Lectures are prestigious lectureships given at the invitation of the Royal College of Physicians and the Royal College of Surgeons of England. It is held on alternate years in rotation with the Hunterian Oration.

The Hunterian Oration is a lecture of the Royal College of Surgeons of England, named in honour of pioneering surgeon John Hunter and held on his birthday, 14 February, each year.

Catherine S. Peckham FFPHM is a British paediatrician.

Douglas Montagu Temple Gairdner FRCP was a Scottish paediatrician, research scientist, academic and author. Gairdner was principally known for a number of research studies in neonatology at a time when that subject was being developed as perhaps the most rewarding application of basic physiology to patient care, and later his most important contributions as editor, firstly editing Recent Advances in Paediatrics, and then of Archives of Disease in Childhood for 15 years, turning the latter into an international journal of repute with its exemplary standards of content and presentation.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">David Morley (paediatrician)</span> British paediatrician

David Cornelius Morley was a British paediatrician and Emeritus Professor of Child Health, UCL Institute of Child Health who saved the lives of many thousands of children in developing countries.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Neena Modi</span> President of the Royal College of Paediatrics and Child Health

Neena Modi is a British physician and Professor of Neonatal medicine at Imperial College London. She is the current president of the UK Medical Women’s Federation, and past-president of the Royal College of Paediatrics and Child Health, serving in this role from April 2015 to April 2018. She is one of only four women to ever hold this position.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Herbert Barrie</span> Consultant paediatrician

Herbert Barrie, was a British consultant paediatrician and a leading figure in neonatology. He was a pioneer in the emerging specialty of paediatrics and neonatal medicine; and he developed one of the first neonatal intensive care units in London.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Ronald Illingworth</span>

Ronald Stanley Illingworth FRCP was a British born Yorkshireman and a paediatrician of renown. He was also a prolific writer, who wrote some 600 articles and at least 21 books, which were exceedingly popular and sold in large quantities. Illingworth was principally known for being largely responsible for introducing the science and practice of paediatrics to the UK in the early to mid-1940s.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Martin Barratt</span> British paediatrician and professor

Thomas Martin Barratt was a British paediatrician and professor of paediatric nephrology. Barratt was most notable for developing a specialist service for children with kidney diseases in Britain, bringing peritoneal dialysis, haemodialysis, and later renal transplantation to ever younger children. Barratt was an early advocate for multidisciplinary care and developed a model that was later taken up by many other specialist centres across the world. His research led to a new treatments for many types of childhood kidney diseases., and for research into childhood Nephrotic syndrome and Hemolytic-uremic syndrome.

Sir Alan William Craft is a British paediatric oncologist and Emeritus Professor of Child Health at Newcastle University. Craft was most notable for work as one of nine founders of the Children's Cancer Study Group, focusing his research on paediatric oncology, especially the epidemiology of bone tumours that further led to an oncology research unit which has been involved in aetiological studies and in particular the role of irradiation in the development of childhood cancer.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">British Association of Perinatal Medicine</span>

British Association of Perinatal Medicine known as BAPM, is a charitable organization that was founded in Bristol in 1976 that is most notable for being a pressure group to advance the standards of perinatal care within the United Kingdom by a dedicated core of professional physicians who are accredited by examination.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Jocalyn Clark</span>

Jocalyn Clark is a Canadian Public Health Scientist and the International Editor of The BMJ, with responsibility for strategy and internationalising the journal's content, contributors and coverage. From 2016 to 2022, Jocalyn was an Executive Editor at The Lancet, where she led the Commentary section, coordinated peer review, and edited and delivered collections of articles and Commissions on topics such as maternal and child health, oral health, migration, end of life care and gender equity. She led the Lancet's project to advance women in science, medicine, and global health, #LancetWomen. She is also an Adjunct Professor of Medicine at the University of Toronto and an Honorary Associate Professor at the Institute for Global Health at UCL.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Richard H. R. White</span> British paediatric nephrologist

Richard Henry Reeve White was a paediatric nephrologist, emeritus Professor of Paediatric Nephrology from the University of Birmingham morphologist and archivist for British Association for Paediatric Nephrology.

References

  1. 1 2 W. Rubinstein; Michael A. Jolles (27 January 2011). The Palgrave Dictionary of Anglo-Jewish History. Palgrave Macmillan UK. p. 1035. ISBN   978-0-230-30466-6 . Retrieved 24 May 2018.
  2. 1 2 3 "Professor Otto Herbert Wolff". The Royal College of Paediatrics and Child Health. The Royal College of Paediatrics and Child Health. 2 March 2017. Retrieved 24 May 2018.
  3. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 "Otto Herbert Wolff". Munks Roll – Lives of the Fellows. Royal College of Physicians: Royal College of Physicians. XII. 21 August 2013. Archived from the original on 28 December 2017. Retrieved 24 May 2018.
  4. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 "Professor Otto Wolff Obituary". Telegraph Media Group Limited 2018. The Telegraph. 20 May 2010. Retrieved 24 May 2018.
  5. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 "Otto Wolff". Times Newspapers. The Times. 5 July 2010. Retrieved 31 May 2018.
  6. EDWARDS, JH; HARNDEN, DG; CAMERON, AH; CROSSE, VM; WOLFF, OH (9 April 1960). "A new trisomic syndrome". Lancet. 1 (7128): 787–90. doi:10.1016/s0140-6736(60)90675-9. PMID   13819419.