Friedrich August von Ammon (1799-1861)*

Authors
Citation
Dm. Reifler, Friedrich August von Ammon (1799-1861)*, DOC OPHTHAL, 99(3), 1999, pp. 199-213
Citations number
10
Categorie Soggetti
Optalmology
Journal title
DOCUMENTA OPHTHALMOLOGICA
ISSN journal
00124486 → ACNP
Volume
99
Issue
3
Year of publication
1999
Pages
199 - 213
Database
ISI
SICI code
0012-4486(1999)99:3<199:FAVA(>2.0.ZU;2-N
Abstract
As this year marks the 200th anniversary of the birth of Friedrich August v on Ammon (1799-1861), it presents an opportunity to recall and celebrate Am mon's life and his many contributions that helped shape both ophthalmology and plastic surgery into independent specialties. Some 250 years after Geor g Bartisch, Ammon reestablished Dresden as a major center of ophthalmology, through the creation of a teaching institute, the publication of influenti al periodicals, and his personal publication of important monographs and jo urnal articles. Ammon's Zeitschrift fur die Ophthalmologie (founded 1830) w as only the third journal in history that had been entirely devoted to opht halmology. His prize-winning treatise, De Iritide (1835), correcty categori zed iritis and gave a detailed description of sympathetic ophthalmia. His b eautiful color-plate atlas, Klinische Darstellungen (1838-1841), contains l andmark descriptions of congenital eye anomalies and has been described by Norman as 'the best summary of the knowledge of diseases of the eye prior t o the introduction of the ophthalmoscope.' Ammon made most of his literary contributions in ophthalmology but he also contributed to another emerging field, plastic surgery. His monograph, Die plastische Chirurgie (1842), cri tically and comprehensively surveyed the entire history and current practic e of plastic surgery, one of the very first textbooks to achieve this goal. In his last monograph (1858) Ammon returned to the subject of embryology o f the human eye and drew upon his 30 years of study. Before his death, two of his last papers reported ophthalmoscopic observations, demonstrating his exploration of the frontiers of ophthalmology that characterized his entir e career.