Carl Wilhelm Boeck
Carl Wilhelm Boeck (December 15, 1808 – December 10, 1875) was a Norwegian dermatologist born in Kongsberg.
In 1831 he earned his medical degree from the University of Christiania, and from 1833 to 1846, he practiced medicine in Kongsberg. Afterwards, he became a lecturer of dermatology and surgery at Christiania (1846), and in 1851 attained a full professorship. Later in his career, he visited America in order to research leprosy among Norwegian immigrants.
Boeck specialized in research and treatment of syphilis. He is remembered for his experiments with "syphilization", which was a form of vaccination against the disease. The practice consisted of repeated inoculations of secretion from "soft chancre", until inoculation caused no further reaction. Boeck wasn't the first physician to use syphilization, as it was earlier attempted by Joseph Alexandre Auzias-Turenne (1812–1870), who experimented with syphilization on laboratory animals.[1]
In the 1840s, with dermatologist Daniel Cornelius Danielssen (1815–1894), Boeck conducted research of leprosy. From their studies, the two physicians collaborated on an important treatise called Om Spedalskhed (On Leprosy). At the time, Boeck and Danielssen believed leprosy to be an hereditary disease.
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