Russell Morse Wilder Explained

Russell Morse Wilder
Birth Date:November 24, 1885
Birth Place:Cincinnati, Ohio
Death Date:December 16, 1959
Death Place:Rochester, Minnesota
Occupation:Physician

Russell Morse Wilder Sr. (November 24, 1885 – December 16, 1959)[1] was an American physician, diabetologist, epileptologist, and medical researcher, known as one of the originators of the ketogenic ("classic keto") diet as a therapy for both epilepsy[2] [3] and diabetes.[4] [5] He coined the term "ketogenic diet."[2] He was also among the first American physicians to use insulin for patients with diabetes.[5]

Biography

At the University of Chicago he graduated with a B.S. in 1907 and with a Ph.D. in pathology in 1911. At Rush Medical College he was an instructor from 1909 to 1910 in pathology and anatomy and graduated there in 1911 with an M.D.[6] (Rush Medical College was affiliated with the University of Chicago until 1942.) During his undergraduate study he spent a year at Heidelberg University. As a medical student, he went to Mexico City in December 1909 with the physician and medical researcher Howard Taylor Ricketts to study typhus fever in the Valley of Mexico. Ricketts died of the disease on May 5, 1910, but Wilder returned to Mexico to carry on the research. He studied for eight months in 1914 in Vienna, principally at the First Medical Clinic under the pathologist Albert Müller-Deham (1881–1971), who had studied as a medical assistant under Carl von Noorden. Upon his return from Vienna, Wilder became a physician at Chicago's Presbyterian Hospital,[1] where he worked from 1914 to 1917[6] and completed his medical residency.[1] While he worked at Presbyterian Hospital, he was a fellow at the Sprague Memorial Institute from 1915 to 1917.[6]

At the Mayo Clinic, Wilder was a staff member from 1919 to 1929[6] and was section head for all the diabetic patients.[1] At the Mayo Foundation he was an assistant professor from 1919 to 1922 and an associate professor from 1922 to 1929.[6] From 1929 to 1931 he was a professor of medicine and chair of the department of medicine at the University of Chicago. In 1931 he rejoined the staff of the Mayo Clinic and became, at the Mayo Foundation, a full professor and head of the department of medicine. At the Mayo Clinic he investigated clinical problems of metabolism and nutrition. In 1950 he retired from the Mayo Clinic and Mayo Foundation to become the first director of the newly formed National Institute of Arthritis and Metabolic Diseases. In 1953, due to health problems, he retired as the institute's director and returned to Rochester, Minnesota.[1]

Wilder was the author or co-author of more than 250 papers and contributed to several medical textbooks and to the Encyclopaedia Britannica. He served "at various times on the editorial board of the Journal of Nutrition and the Archives of Internal Medicine, the editorial committee of Nutrition Reviews and as an associate editor of Public Health Reports."[1] He used his expertise in medicine and nutrition to serve the U.S. Federal government in several committees and agencies, especially during WW II.[1] For a one-year term from 1946 to 1947 he was the president of the American Diabetes Association.[1] In 1950 he delivered the Frank Billings Lecture.[7] In 1954 he received the American Medical Association's Joseph Goldberger Award in Clinical Nutrition. In 1956 he was the president of the National Vitamin Foundation, which in 1954 created the Russell M. Wilder Fellowship. In 1956 he received an award from the American Bakers Association "in recognition of his leadership in promoting enrichment of white flour and bread with vitamins."[1]

On March 18, 1911, in Butler, Ohio, he married Lucy Elizabeth Beeler (1889–1968). Upon his death he was survived by his widow and two sons, Russell Morse Wilder, Jr., M.D. (1912–1979) and Thomas Carroll Wilder, M.D. (1915–1961).

Selected publications

Articles

Books

References

  1. 10.2337/diab.9.5.419. Russell Morse Wilder, Sr. 1885–1959. 1960. Sprague. Randall G.. Diabetes. 9. 5. 419–420. 88436752.
  2. 10.1111/j.1528-1167.2008.01821.x. History of the ketogenic diet. 2008. Wheless. James W.. Epilepsia. 49. 3–5. 19049574. 45340697.
  3. 10.1016/j.yebeh.2019.106588. History of dietary treatment from Wilder's hypothesis to the first open studies in the 1920s. 2019. Höhn. Sophie. Dozières-Puyravel. Blandine. Auvin. Stéphane. Epilepsy & Behavior. 101. Pt A. 106588. 31677579. 204963505. free.
  4. Book: Macleod, John James Rickard. John James Rickard Macleod. Campbell, Walter Ruggles. Walter Ruggles Campbell. Insulin: Its Use in the Treatment of Diabetes. 1925. Williams & Wilkins. 124.
  5. Web site: A Line in the Sand – Mayo Clinic's role in insulin research. Discovery's Edge, Mayo Clinic's Research Magazine. March 2015.
  6. Book: American Men of Science: A Biographical Dictionary. 1949. 2706. Cattell, J.. 8th. The Science Press. Lancaster, Pennsylvania.
  7. 10.1001/jama.1950.02920150008003. Reflections on the Causation of Diabetes Mellitus. 1950. Wilder. Russell M.. Journal of the American Medical Association. 144. 15. 1234–1238. 14778728. (1950 Frank Billings Lecture)
  8. Struve, Mildred. 1935. Review of A Primer for Diabetic Patients by R. M. Wilder. American Journal of Nursing. 35. 7. 714. 10.2307/3411460. 3411460.

External links