Axel Holst Explained

Axel Holst
Birth Date:1860 9, df=yes
Birth Place:Oslo, Norway
Death Place:Oslo, Norway
Nationality:Norwegian
Field:Pathology
Work Institution:University of Oslo
Alma Mater:University of Oslo
Known For:Treatment of Beriberi and Scurvy

Axel Holst (6 September 1860 – 26 April 1931) was a Norwegian Professor of Hygiene and Bacteriology at the University of Oslo.He was most known for his contributions to the study of the treatment of Beriberi and Scurvy.[1]

Biography

Holst was born in Christiania (now Oslo), Norway. He was the son of Axel Holst (1826–80) and Anna Mathilde Charlotte Flemming (1832–97).He was the brother of the linguist Clara Holst and grandson of Frederik Holst. Both his father and grandfather were physicians. [2] [3]

Holst attended Christiania Cathedral School (1877).He studied at Royal Frederick University (now University of Oslo) gaining his cand.med. in 1884. In 1887, he was awarded the Crown Prince's gold medal (Kronprinsens gullmedalje). He was granted his doctorate in 1892 involving the bacterium streptococcus. [4]

He was an assistant at the National Institute of Pathological Anatomy from 1885-89. During 1890-1892, he studied at various European laboratories including visits at Kiel, Berlin, Munich and Paris. He was appointed health inspector in Christiania from 1892-93. He was appointed Professor of Hygiene and Bacteriology at the University of Kristiania from 1893. He was also director of the university's newly established Hygiene Institute until his retirement in 1930. He died in Oslo during 1931 at age 70.[5]

Research

Throughout his career, Holst made many other contributions, writing numerous medical books and articles related to sanitation, health and practical hygiene. Holst conducted his most notable research work with Theodor Frølich (1870-1947) who was a Professor of Pediatrics at the University. Holst and Frølich suspected a nutritional deficiency for scurvy in the Norwegian fishing fleet, then called "shipboard beriberi," and thought to be a variant of beri-beri. Holst and Frølich established an animal model that allowed systematic study of factors that led to the ship-related dietary disease, as well as the preventive value of different substances.[6] [7]

Substituting guinea pigs for pigeons (a traditional beriberi research model) as the experimental animal for these studies was a lucky coincidence, as the guinea pig was later shown to be among the very few mammals capable of showing scurvy-like symptoms, while pigeons, as seed-eating birds, were later shown to make their own vitamin C in the liver, and could not develop scurvy. Scurvy occurred in guinea pigs when a diet was fed consisting of various types of grain, either whole or baked into bread, and these symptoms were prevented when the diet was supplemented with known antiscorbutics like fresh cabbage or lemon juice.[8]

Their findings were published in 1907 in the Journal of Hygiene, but were unpopular within the scientific community as the concepts of nutritional deficiencies was unheard of at the time (the concept and word "vitamine" did not arrive until 1912, and was in part based upon Holst and Frølich's work). However, in the later work which led up to the isolation of vitamin C as the antiscorbutic factor in 1932-33, Holst and Frølich's guinea pig model of scurvy proved to be the key biological assay which allowed identification of the chemical substance (hexuronic acid, later called ascorbic acid) which was ascorbutic vitamin.[9] [10]

Honors

External links

Related reading

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Axel Holst. Norsk biografisk leksikon. Per Holck. February 1, 2018.
  2. Encyclopedia: 2001. Clara Holst. Norsk biografisk leksikon. Ernst Håkon. Jahr. Ernst Håkon Jahr. Knut. Helle. Knut Helle. Kunnskapsforlaget. Oslo. 4. 2nd. Norwegian. 18 March 2012.
  3. Web site: Frederik Holst. Norsk biografisk leksikon. Øivind Larsen. February 1, 2018.
  4. Web site: H.K.H. Kronprinsens gullmedalje. University of Oslo . February 1, 2018.
  5. Web site: Axel Holst. Store norske leksikon. Svein Atle Skålevåg. February 1, 2018.
  6. http://jn.nutrition.org/cgi/reprint/53/1/1 Axel Holst: (September 6, 1860-April 26, 1931) - Johnson 53 (1): 1 - Journal of Nutrition
  7. Web site: Theodor Frølich. Norsk biografisk leksikon . Per Holck . February 1, 2018.
  8. Web site: Axel Holst og Theodor Frølich – pionerer i bekjempelsen av skjørbuk . Tidsskrift Den norske legeforening . Kaare R. Norum, Hans J. Grav . 30 June 2002 . February 1, 2018.
  9. Web site: Theodor Christian Brun Frølich. Store norske leksikon . Svein Atle Skålevåg. February 1, 2018.
  10. Web site: Contesting the Animal Model: Axel Holst and the Controversy over Scurvy and Beriberi . Social History of Medicine. Vol. 27, No. 3 pp. 577–593 . Kristin Asda . February 1, 2018.