Javascript must be enabled to continue!
Vilhelm Magnus — pioneer neurosurgeon
View through CrossRef
✓ In parallel with but completely independent from Harvey Cushing, Norway had its own giant in the establishment of the special field of neurological surgery. Vilhelm Magnus (1871–1929), born in the United States in Fillmore County, Minnesota, was Norway's pioneering neurosurgeon. Following graduation in Oslo, he started his clinical training in neurology and became an early member of the small group of neurologists of the time who were dissatisfied with the therapeutic nihilism generally accepted in relation to diseases of the nervous system. After working with Victor Horsley, whom he held in high esteem, Magnus devoted himself to surgically treatable lesions in the nervous system. During a quarter of a century he single-handedly established the special field of neurological surgery in Norway. Magnus was a far-seeing and brilliant surgeon with a broad intellectual mind, a startling diligence, and wide research activities. He published his first scientific paper in 1899 and his total contribution to the literature amounted to 70 papers. In 1901 he was able to demonstrate the importance of the corpus luteum in the first 3 weeks of pregnancy. As early as 1903 Magnus manifested his interest in the surgical treatment of brain tumors. In 1926 his surgical material comprised 216 patients, with an 8% operative mortality rate among 161 cases of supratentorial tumor versus 17% for 55 cases of infratentorial tumors, including 14 cases of acoustic tumor. Vilhelm Magnus, who visited Harvey Cushing in 1928, has hitherto not been given the attention he merits.
Journal of Neurosurgery Publishing Group (JNSPG)
Title: Vilhelm Magnus — pioneer neurosurgeon
Description:
✓ In parallel with but completely independent from Harvey Cushing, Norway had its own giant in the establishment of the special field of neurological surgery.
Vilhelm Magnus (1871–1929), born in the United States in Fillmore County, Minnesota, was Norway's pioneering neurosurgeon.
Following graduation in Oslo, he started his clinical training in neurology and became an early member of the small group of neurologists of the time who were dissatisfied with the therapeutic nihilism generally accepted in relation to diseases of the nervous system.
After working with Victor Horsley, whom he held in high esteem, Magnus devoted himself to surgically treatable lesions in the nervous system.
During a quarter of a century he single-handedly established the special field of neurological surgery in Norway.
Magnus was a far-seeing and brilliant surgeon with a broad intellectual mind, a startling diligence, and wide research activities.
He published his first scientific paper in 1899 and his total contribution to the literature amounted to 70 papers.
In 1901 he was able to demonstrate the importance of the corpus luteum in the first 3 weeks of pregnancy.
As early as 1903 Magnus manifested his interest in the surgical treatment of brain tumors.
In 1926 his surgical material comprised 216 patients, with an 8% operative mortality rate among 161 cases of supratentorial tumor versus 17% for 55 cases of infratentorial tumors, including 14 cases of acoustic tumor.
Vilhelm Magnus, who visited Harvey Cushing in 1928, has hitherto not been given the attention he merits.
Related Results
Free polynilpotent groups and the Magnus property
Free polynilpotent groups and the Magnus property
Abstract
Motivated by a classic result for free groups, one says that a group
G has the Magnus property if the following holds: Whenever two
elements generate the sa...
SWATH Technology for Subsea System Intervention
SWATH Technology for Subsea System Intervention
Abstract
Small water-plane area twin hull (SWATH) technology is being used for seagoing vessels in the marine construction industry to provide a stable working de...
Gustav Magnus und die Physikalische Gesellschaft zu Berlin – ein ambivalentes Verhältnis?
Gustav Magnus und die Physikalische Gesellschaft zu Berlin – ein ambivalentes Verhältnis?
“Gustav Magnus and the Physical Society of Berlin—An Ambivalent Relationship?” by Wolfgang Schreier (German language).—Wolfgang Schreier examines Gustav Magnus’s ambivalent relatio...
ROLE OF THE “YOUNG PIONEER LEADER” MAGAZINE IN THE ACTIVITY OF YOUNG PIONEER WORKERS OF THE TATAR REPUBLIC IN 1924-1926
ROLE OF THE “YOUNG PIONEER LEADER” MAGAZINE IN THE ACTIVITY OF YOUNG PIONEER WORKERS OF THE TATAR REPUBLIC IN 1924-1926
The article identifies the practical value of the first issues of the “Young Pioneer Leader” magazine for the Young Pioneer workers of the Tatar Republic. The author concludes that...
Hans Sølling: Danish pioneer neurosurgeon
Hans Sølling: Danish pioneer neurosurgeon
✓ Hans Adolf Sølling (1879–1945), working completely on his own in the small town of Horsens, was Denmark's first neurosurgeon. Sølling was an admirable and talented man who perfor...
Site Investigation for Magnus
Site Investigation for Magnus
ABSTRACT
In April 1982, BP's Magnus structure was installed about 150 km northeast of the Shetland Islands. The most northerly, deepest water platform in the Nort...
Vilhelm Grundtvig 1866-1950
Vilhelm Grundtvig 1866-1950
Vilhelm Grundtvig: In Memoriam. By Gustav Albeck. Vilhelm Grundtvig (1866—1950), formerly Head Librarian at Aarhus, was the son of N. F. S. Grundtvig’s eldest son, the archivist Jo...

