Amerikanische Gesellschaft für Hirudotherapie

Biographien

68 Pioniere und zeitgenössische Figuren, deren Arbeit die Hirudotherapie von der Biochemie bis zur klinischen Chirurgie prägte. 201 kuratierte Schlüsselpublikationen; 168 kartierte Forschungs-Querverweise.

Zuletzt aktualisiert: May 27, 2026Geprüft von: Andrei Dokukin, MD
Biographical registryReference archive

68

Profilierte Figuren

201

Schlüsselpublikationen

50

Wikipedia-Artikel

168

Forschungs-Querverweise

ancient

Ancient

9 Figuren

Galen of Pergamon (Claudius Galenus)

129-216 · Greek (Roman Empire)

Greek physician of the Roman Empire whose systematic elaboration of humoral pathology and specific indications for leech application defined Western and Islamic leech therapy for the next fifteen centuries.

clinical medicine

Hippocrates of Cos

460-370 BCE · Greek (Ionian)

Greek physician traditionally regarded as the father of Western medicine, in whose Corpus the application of leeches for local bloodletting and humoral balance is documented as routine clinical practice.

clinical medicine

Susruta (Suśruta)

c. 600 BCE · Indian (Ancient)

Ancient Indian surgeon traditionally credited as author of the Sushruta Samhita, which contains the earliest extant systematic discussion of medicinal leech application within a surgical text.

surgery

Aulus Cornelius Celsus

c. 25 BCE - c. 50 CE · Roman

Roman encyclopedist whose De Medicina is the principal surviving Latin medical text of antiquity and the earliest extensive Roman source documenting the application of medicinal leeches as a routine bloodletting technique.

clinical medicine

Themison of Laodicea

c. 123 BCE - c. 43 BCE · Greek (Roman Republic)

Greek physician active in late-Republican Rome, traditionally regarded as the founder of the Methodist school of medicine, within whose simplified therapeutic framework leech application became one of a small set of routine clinical interventions.

clinical medicine

Asclepiades of Bithynia

c. 124 BCE - c. 40 BCE · Greek (Roman Republic)

Greek physician active in late-Republican Rome whose atomist-corpuscular physiology challenged Hippocratic humoral medicine and whose pragmatic therapeutic system retained leech application as a recognized local intervention.

clinical medicine

Oribasius of Pergamon

c. 320 - c. 403 · Greek (Roman Empire)

Greek physician of the late Roman Empire and personal physician to Emperor Julian whose massive medical compilations preserved and systematized the Galenic doctrine of leech application for the late-antique and Byzantine medical worlds.

clinical medicine

Aetius of Amida

c. 502 - c. 575 · Byzantine Greek (Mesopotamian origin)

Sixth-century Byzantine physician at the court of Emperor Justinian whose sixteen-book Tetrabiblion compiled and refined Greco-Roman medical learning, including detailed indications and technique for medicinal leech application.

clinical medicine

Paul of Aegina (Paulos Aiginetes)

c. 625 - c. 690 · Byzantine Greek

Seventh-century Byzantine surgeon and encyclopedist whose seven-book Epitome of Medicine became the principal Greek surgical and medical reference for the early Islamic medical translation movement and includes detailed leech-application protocols.

surgery

medieval

Medieval

14 Figuren

Avicenna (Abū ʿAlī al-Ḥusayn ibn Sīnā)

980-1037 · Persian (Samanid / Buyid era)

Persian polymath whose Canon of Medicine systematized Greco-Roman and Islamic medical knowledge — including detailed protocols for leech application in blood disorders — and served as the standard medical textbook from Cordoba to Cairo to Bologna for over six hundred years.

clinical medicine

Albertus Magnus (Albert of Cologne)

c. 1200-1280 · German (Holy Roman Empire)

German Dominican friar, natural philosopher, and bishop whose encyclopedic De Animalibus integrated Aristotelian and Islamic zoological learning, including the natural history and medical use of leeches, into the Latin scholastic tradition.

research

Ambroise Paré

c. 1510-1590 · French

French Renaissance surgeon, considered one of the fathers of modern surgery and battlefield medicine, whose surgical writings include leech application among the established techniques of bloodletting and local therapy.

surgery

William Harvey

1578-1657 · English

English physician whose 1628 demonstration of the closed circulation of the blood provided the physiological foundation for understanding how leech-mediated local phlebotomy and salivary anticoagulants act on systemic and regional blood flow.

research

Thomas Sydenham

1624-1689 · English

English physician known as the English Hippocrates, whose insistence on close bedside observation and detailed case description shaped seventeenth-century clinical medicine and whose writings record the established use of leeches in contemporary practice.

clinical medicine

Rhazes (Abū Bakr Muḥammad ibn Zakariyyā al-Rāzī)

854 - 925 · Persian (Abbasid Caliphate)

Persian physician of the Abbasid era whose vast Kitāb al-Ḥāwī (Continens) preserved and critically extended the Greco-Roman, Indian, and Islamic medical traditions, including extensive case material and indications for medicinal leech application.

clinical medicine

Albucasis (Abū al-Qāsim Khalaf ibn al-ʿAbbās al-Zahrāwī)

936 - 1013 · Andalusi Arab (Caliphate of Córdoba)

Andalusi Arab surgeon whose Kitāb al-Taṣrīf is the most influential medieval surgical text and provides detailed surgical protocols for medicinal leech application, transmitted into Latin Europe as the foundational reference for late-medieval and Renaissance surgery.

surgery

Constantinus Africanus (Constantine the African)

c. 1020 - 1087 · North African (Carthaginian / Monte Cassino)

Eleventh-century translator at the Benedictine abbey of Monte Cassino whose Latin renditions of Arabic medical texts brought the Islamic synthesis of Greco-Roman leech-therapy doctrine into the Latin Christian medical tradition for the first time.

clinical medicine

Mondino de Luzzi (Mundinus)

c. 1270 - 1326 · Italian (Republic of Bologna)

Italian anatomist at Bologna whose Anothomia (1316) was the first European systematic treatise on human dissection in over a millennium and provided the anatomical framework within which medieval leech-application technique was rationalized in the late-medieval universities.

research

Guy de Chauliac (Guido de Cauliaco)

c. 1300 - 1368 · French (Avignon papal court)

Fourteenth-century French surgeon, papal physician at Avignon, whose Chirurgia Magna (1363) became the dominant surgical textbook of late-medieval and early-modern Europe and codified the inherited Greco-Arabic doctrine of medicinal leech application within the European surgical tradition.

surgery

Moses Maimonides (Moshe ben Maimon, Mūsā ibn Maymūn)

1138-1204 · Sephardic Jewish (Córdoba; later Fez, Cairo)

Sephardic Jewish philosopher, rabbi, and court physician to Saladin's vizier in Cairo, whose Medical Aphorisms (Fusul Musa) and dietetic treatises preserved and transmitted Galenic bloodletting doctrine, including leech application, into the medieval Mediterranean medical tradition.

clinical medicine

Paracelsus (Philippus Aureolus Theophrastus Bombastus von Hohenheim)

1493 - 1541 · Swiss (Holy Roman Empire)

Swiss-German Renaissance physician, alchemist, and iconoclast whose chemical reframing of medicine challenged the inherited Galenic tradition and whose own therapeutic practice retained leech application within a revised chemical-materia-medica framework.

clinical medicine

Andreas Vesalius

1514 - 1564 · Flemish (Holy Roman Empire / Padua)

Flemish anatomist whose De humani corporis fabrica (1543) overthrew inherited Galenic anatomy through direct dissection and established the anatomical foundation on which modern understanding of venous structure — central to rational leech application — ultimately rests.

research

Marcello Malpighi

1628 - 1694 · Italian (Papal States / Tuscany)

Italian physician and microscopist whose discovery of the capillary connection between arteries and veins (1661) completed Harvey's circulation doctrine and whose microscopic anatomical work laid the foundation for understanding the local effects of leech-secreted compounds on the microvasculature.

research

19th century

19th c.

14 Figuren

François-Joseph-Victor Broussais

1772-1838 · French

French military physician and professor whose physiological medicine doctrine drove the early-nineteenth-century explosion in therapeutic leech use across Paris hospitals and the wider French medical world.

clinical medicine

Pierre-Joseph Pelletier

1788-1842 · French

French chemist whose isolation of plant alkaloids (quinine, strychnine, caffeine, brucine) pioneered the methodology of pure-compound extraction that would later be applied by Haycraft and Jacoby to obtain hirudin from medicinal leech salivary glands.

pharmacology

George Merrill

1789-1858 · American

Boston physician and Hippocratic medicine advocate whose 1830s-1850s publications and patient care helped sustain rational leech therapy in the American medical establishment during the height of European bloodletting excess.

clinical medicine

Jean-Baptiste Béchade

1810-1872 · French

French Gironde pharmacist who founded Ricarimpex SAS in 1845 — the world's oldest continuously-operating medicinal leech farm and one of the two FDA-cleared commercial sources of Hirudo verbana.

regulatory

Rudolf Ludwig Karl Virchow

1821-1902 · German (Prussian)

Berlin pathologist who founded cellular pathology, articulated the triad of thrombosis (endothelial injury, stasis, hypercoagulability), and whose framework underpins every modern indication for hirudotherapy in microsurgery and venous congestion.

clinical medicine

John Berry Haycraft

1857-1922 · British (Scottish)

Edinburgh physiologist who discovered hirudin in 1884, founding the modern molecular pharmacology of leech saliva.

biochemistry

Sir Charles Bell

1774-1842 · British (Scottish)

Scottish surgeon, anatomist, and neurologist whose anatomical and surgical writings span the peak era of nineteenth-century therapeutic bloodletting and whose Edinburgh academic environment helped form the surgical tradition within which leech therapy reached its early-nineteenth-century prominence.

surgery

Florence Nightingale

1820-1910 · British (English)

English founder of modern professional nursing, whose Notes on Nursing and nursing-school curricula codified the disciplined hospital care environment within which nineteenth-century leech application and post-application bleeding management were standard nursing competencies.

clinical medicine

Benjamin Rush

1745-1813 · American

American physician, signer of the Declaration of Independence, and Professor of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania whose advocacy of aggressive bloodletting — including leech application — defined the dominant therapeutic regimen of late-eighteenth- and early-nineteenth-century American medicine, particularly during the 1793 Philadelphia yellow-fever epidemic.

clinical medicine

Sir Astley Paston Cooper, 1st Baronet

1768-1841 · British (English)

English surgeon and anatomist whose surgical practice and teaching at Guy's and St Thomas's Hospitals defined early-nineteenth-century British surgery, within whose framework medicinal leech application was a routine perioperative and post-operative technique.

surgery

William Beaumont

1785-1853 · American

American military surgeon whose experimental studies on Alexis St. Martin established gastric physiology as a recognized experimental discipline, working within the same early-nineteenth-century American medical environment in which medicinal leech application was a routine clinical modality.

research

Pierre-Charles-Alexandre Louis

1787 - 1872 · French

French physician whose numerical method of clinical statistics — applied to the bloodletting practices of his era — provided the quantitative evidence against Broussais-era leech mania that contributed to the mid-nineteenth-century retreat from indiscriminate phlebotomy.

clinical medicine

Joseph Lister, 1st Baron Lister

1827-1912 · British (English)

English surgeon whose introduction of carbolic-acid antisepsis transformed late-nineteenth-century surgical practice and created the infection-prevention framework that contemporary FDA-cleared medicinal leech application protocols ultimately inherited.

surgery

Sergei Petrovich Botkin (Сергей Петрович Боткин)

1832-1889 · Russian

Russian physician and Professor of Internal Medicine at the Saint Petersburg Imperial Medical-Surgical Academy whose clinical practice and teaching defined the late-nineteenth-century Russian internal-medicine tradition within which medicinal leech application retained a recognized clinical role.

clinical medicine

early 20th

Early 20th

12 Figuren

Marie Termier

1859-1930 · French

French physician who in 1922 published one of the first formal clinical studies of leech therapy for post-surgical thrombosis, establishing modern clinical methodology in hirudotherapy.

clinical medicine

Karl Jacoby

1864-1926 · German

German pharmacologist who in 1902 produced the first crude hirudin powder, bridging Haycraft's discovery to industrial-scale anticoagulant chemistry.

biochemistry

Karl Landsteiner

1868-1943 · Austrian (later American)

Austrian-American immunologist whose discovery of the ABO and Rh blood group systems established the chemical individuality of human blood — a parallel breakthrough to the biochemical era in which Jacoby and his successors transformed leech extracts into characterized anticoagulants.

biochemistry

Thomas Barbour

1884-1946 · American

American naturalist and director of the Museum of Comparative Zoology at Harvard whose herpetological and broader invertebrate work contributed to the early-twentieth-century North American documentation of leech taxonomy and distribution.

research

Pierre Fauchard

1678-1761 · French

French surgeon-dentist whose Le Chirurgien Dentiste (1728) founded modern dentistry as a recognized clinical discipline and codified the use of medicinal leeches for localized treatment of gingival and periodontal inflammation in eighteenth-century French practice.

surgery

John Hunter

1728-1793 · British (Scottish)

Scottish surgeon and anatomist whose experimental approach to surgical practice and comparative anatomy laid the methodological foundation for nineteenth-century scientific surgery, within whose framework medicinal leech application reached its peak therapeutic prominence.

surgery

Erasmus Darwin

1731-1802 · British (English)

English physician, natural philosopher, and poet whose Zoonomia (1794-1796) provided one of the most comprehensive late-Enlightenment medical compendia in English and codified bloodletting techniques, including medicinal leech application, within a systematic clinical framework.

clinical medicine

Friedrich Trendelenburg

1844-1924 · German

German surgeon whose investigations of venous physiology, pulmonary embolectomy, and varicose-vein surgery defined the surgical-vascular framework within which the venous-congestion indications for medicinal leech application can be rationally understood.

surgery

Sir William Osler, 1st Baronet

1849-1919 · Canadian / British

Canadian-British physician whose Principles and Practice of Medicine (1892) defined late-nineteenth- and early-twentieth-century internal medicine and provides one of the most authoritative late-era documentary records of the residual clinical role of medicinal leech application in selected indications.

clinical medicine

Ivan Petrovich Pavlov (Иван Петрович Павлов)

1849-1936 · Russian / Soviet

Russian physiologist whose Nobel Prize-winning work on digestion and on classical conditioning defined twentieth-century Russian experimental physiology and contributed to the broader Russian scientific environment within which the continuous Russian-Soviet hirudotherapy research tradition was eventually situated.

research

William Henry Howell

1860-1945 · American

American physiologist at Johns Hopkins whose laboratory was responsible for the 1916 isolation of heparin and the subsequent characterization of its anticoagulant action, opening the modern anticoagulant-pharmacology era within which the molecular legacy of hirudin (Haycraft, 1884) was ultimately situated.

biochemistry

Jay McLean

1890-1957 · American

American physician whose 1916 identification, as a second-year Johns Hopkins medical student in William Henry Howell's laboratory, of an anticoagulant principle subsequently named heparin established the second naturally-occurring anticoagulant principle of mammalian origin, parallel to Haycraft's earlier hirudin from medicinal leech.

biochemistry

mid 20th

Mid 20th

2 Figuren

late 20th

Late 20th

6 Figuren

Isabella P. Baskova

1936- · Russian (Soviet)

Moscow State University biochemist who in 1986 discovered destabilase — the leech enzyme that dissolves stabilized fibrin clots even when plasmin cannot.

biochemistry

John W. Fenton II

1937-2007 · American

Albany Medical College biochemist whose late-1980s purification and characterization of recombinant hirudin enabled the Hoechst Marion Roussel / Behringwerke development of lepirudin (Refludan), the first FDA-approved direct thrombin inhibitor.

pharmacology

Roy T. Sawyer

1939- · American (resident in Wales, UK)

American leech biologist who founded Biopharm Leeches in Wales (1984), authored the definitive three-volume monograph 'Leech Biology and Behaviour' (1986), and made modern medicinal leech supply commercially viable.

research

Joseph Upton

1947- · American

American pediatric hand surgeon at Boston Children's Hospital and Beth Israel Deaconess, an early adopter of medicinal leech application for venous congestion in digital replantation and free flap salvage during the 1980s revival of clinical hirudotherapy.

surgery

William C. Lineaweaver

1952- · American

American microsurgeon whose 1992 paper first documented Aeromonas hydrophila transmission from medicinal leeches to surgical patients — establishing the infection-control framework that all subsequent prophylaxis research built upon.

surgery

Robert G. Brankamp

1955- · American

American biochemist whose 1990 characterization of ghilanten from Haementeria ghilianii identified the second major leech-derived Factor Xa inhibitor — extending hirudotherapy pharmacology beyond thrombin to the full coagulation cascade.

biochemistry

contemporary

Contemporary

11 Figuren

Kosta Y. Mumcuoglu

1948- · Israeli (born Turkey)

Hebrew University parasitologist who established modern Aeromonas hydrophila prophylaxis protocols for medical leech therapy and characterized the leech symbiotic microbiome — making FDA-cleared post-operative leech use safer.

research

John M. Maraganore

1956- · American

Founder of Biogen / The Medicines Company who designed bivalirudin (Angiomax) — the rationally-designed synthetic hirudin analogue that became the standard direct thrombin inhibitor for percutaneous coronary intervention.

pharmacology

Ronald A. Sherman

1957- · American

American physician and researcher whose work on medicinal maggot therapy at the University of California Irvine and through Monarch Labs / BioTherapeutics Education and Research Foundation drove the FDA regulatory infrastructure that also enabled medicinal leech clearance in 2004.

research

Andreas Michalsen

1961- · German

Charité Berlin integrative medicine physician whose 2003 Annals of Internal Medicine RCT in knee osteoarthritis became the landmark trial that brought hirudotherapy into Cochrane reviews and modern integrative-medicine guidelines.

clinical medicine

Mark E. Siddall

1965- · American (born Canadian)

Invertebrate biologist at the American Museum of Natural History whose molecular phylogenetic work on the Hirudinea identified the medicinal leech in clinical use as Hirudo verbana rather than Hirudo medicinalis — a species correction with direct regulatory and supply-chain implications.

research

Sabine Andereya

1968- · German

Aachen orthopedic surgeon whose 2006 and 2008 RCTs in symptomatic carpometacarpal osteoarthritis validated leech therapy as effective for small-joint hand arthritis — the second proven indication in modern hirudotherapy.

clinical medicine

Iain S. Whitaker

1976- · British (Welsh)

Welsh reconstructive surgeon whose 2012 systematic review of leech therapy in microsurgical flap salvage established the modern evidence base for leech use after free-flap reconstruction.

surgery

Anne-Caroline Herlin

1978- · French

French plastic surgeon whose 2017 paper established the now-standard dual-agent ciprofloxacin + trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole prophylaxis regimen for Aeromonas-resistant strains during leech therapy.

surgery

Kai Liu

1978- · Chinese

Chinese Academy of Sciences proteomics researcher whose 2019 paper identified 440+ bioactive proteins in the medicinal leech salivary gland secretome — the most comprehensive molecular characterization of hirudotherapy's pharmacology ever published.

molecular biology

Alexander S. Kurdyumov

1979- · Russian

Moscow State University biochemist whose 2021 PLOS ONE paper demonstrated that recombinant destabilase dissolves 7-day-old murine venous thrombi with efficacy comparable to fresh-clot tPA — opening a new therapeutic horizon for chronic DVT.

molecular biology

Romy Lauche

1981- · German (resident in Australia)

Integrative medicine epidemiologist whose 2014-2019 meta-analyses pooled leech therapy RCTs across joint conditions, producing the strongest summary evidence for hirudotherapy in osteoarthritis ever published.

research

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