Otto Schultzen

Karl Ludwig Wilhelm Otto Schultzen (16 July 1837 – 7 December 1875) was a German physician born in Lissa.

He studied medicine at the Universities of Königsberg and Berlin, earning his doctorate in 1862 with the thesis Deinanition, accedit observatio et exploratio microscopica. Afterwards he was an assistant to Friedrich Theodor von Frerichs (1819–1885) at the medical clinic in Berlin. He gained his habilitation in 1867, and in 1871 became a professor of clinical medicine at the University of Dorpat. He died four years later at the age of 38.

With Marceli Nencki (1847–1901) he performed physiological studies of urea, discovering that amino acids (glycine and leucine) are intermediate links between protein and urea.,[1][2] With Bernhard Naunyn (1839–1925) he conducted important research involving the behavior of benzene-derived hydrocarbons in the body.[3]

References

  1. Contrasts in scientific style: research groups in the chemical and ... By Joseph Stewart Fruton
  2. Hans Krebs: The formation of a scientific life, 1900-1933, Volume 1 By Frederic Lawrence Holmes
  3. Xenobiotic Metabolism, Oxidation
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