Utilisateur:Daniel Dupont/Brouillons/Ernst Gräfenberg

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Ernst Gräfenberg (né le 26 septembre 1881 à Adelebsen près de Göttingen, décédé le 28 octobre 1957 à New York) est un médecin et scientifique d'origine allemande.

Gräfenberg étudie la médecine à Göttingen et Munich où il obtient son doctorat le 10 mars 1905. Il débuite son activité professionnelle comme ophthalmologue à l'université de Würzburg, puis il exerce au département d'obstétrique et de gynécologie de l'université de Kiel. C'est là qu'il publie un article sur les métastases cancéreuses (la « théorie de Gräfenberg »), et sur les aspects physiologiques de l'implantation de l'oeuf.



studied medicine in Göttingen and Munich, obtaining his doctorate on 10 March 1905. He began working as a doctor of ophthalmology at the university of Würzburg, but then moved to the Department of Obstetrics and Gynaecology at the University of Kiel, where he published papers on cancer «  »métastases (the "Gräfenberg theory"), and the physiology of egg implantation.



In 1910 Gräfenberg started work as a gynaecologist in Berlin, as well as beginning scientific studies at the Berlin University on the physiology of human reproduction. During the First World War, he served as a medical officer, and continued publishing papers, most of them on female physiology.

In 1929 he published his studies of the Gräfenberg ring, the first IUD for which there are usage records.[1]

As a result of the rise of Nazism in Germany, Gräfenberg, as a Jewish physician, was forced in 1933 to give up his post as head of the department of Gynaecology and Obstetrics in Berlin-Britz. Believing himself to be safe, he stayed in Germany. In 1937, however, he was arrested for allegedly smuggling a valuable stamp out of Germany. With the intervention of friends at the International Society of Sexology, he was able to escape Germany in 1940 and emigrate to California. He died on 28 October 1957 in New York.

He gained fame for studies of the female genitals, and female sexual physiology in general. His published papers include the seminal The Role of Urethra in Female Orgasm in 1950, in which he describes female ejaculation, and an erotic zone where the urethra is closest to the vaginal wall. In 1981 sexologists John D. Perry and Beverly Whipple named this area the Gräfenberg spot, or G-spot after him.

Gräfenberg was briefly married to writer Rosie Waldeck.[2]

[modifier] Footnotes

  1. « Evolution and Revolution: The Past, Present, and Future of Contraception », dans Contraception Online (Baylor College of Medicine), 10 [texte intégral]
  2. (de) Matthias David, Frank C. K. Chen, and Jan-Peter Siedentopf, Ernst Gräfenberg: Wer (er)fand den G-Punkt?, Deutsches Ärtzteblatt, November 2005, Seite 498: "Ernst Gräfenberg war für kurze Zeit mit der Schriftstellerin Rosie Waldeck verheiratet." The U.S. Copyright Renewals, 1962 July - December indicate that Rosie Waldeck is also known as Rosie Graefenberg Waldeck, and as "R.G." was author of Prelude to the past; the autobiography of a woman. Time magazine, in its 1942 review of Waldeck's Athene Palace indicates that she is the same person; however, they give the "G" as standing for Goldschmidt, her maiden name.

[modifier] External links

Gräfenberg, Ernst
Gräfenberg, Ernst
Gräfenberg, Ernst