Pauls Stradiņš
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Pauls Stradiņš (17 January 1896 – 14 August 1958) was a
Latvia Latvia, officially the Republic of Latvia, is a country in the Baltic region of Northern Europe. It is one of the three Baltic states, along with Estonia to the north and Lithuania to the south. It borders Russia to the east and Belarus to t ...
n professor,
physician A physician, medical practitioner (British English), medical doctor, or simply doctor is a health professional who practices medicine, which is concerned with promoting, maintaining or restoring health through the Medical education, study, Med ...
, and
surgeon In medicine, a surgeon is a medical doctor who performs surgery. Even though there are different traditions in different times and places, a modern surgeon is a licensed physician and received the same medical training as physicians before spec ...
who founded the Museum of the History of Medicine in
Riga Riga ( ) is the capital, Primate city, primate, and List of cities and towns in Latvia, largest city of Latvia. Home to 591,882 inhabitants (as of 2025), the city accounts for a third of Latvia's total population. The population of Riga Planni ...
.


Early life

Stradiņš was born in Eķengrāve () (now
Viesīte Viesīte (; ) is a town in the western part of Jēkabpils Municipality in the Selonia region of Latvia. The population in 2020 was 1,500. Viesīte is a typical Selonia town located in the hills in the centre of the district. Selonia is a cultura ...
,
Jēkabpils Municipality Jēkabpils Municipality () is a municipality in Latvia. The municipality was formed in 2009 by Merger (politics), merging Ābeļi Parish, Dignāja Parish, Dunava Parish, Kalna Parish, Leimaņi Parish, Rubene Parish and Zasa Parish. During the Adm ...
) as the son of a craftsman and pub owner. He graduated from the Riga Alexander Gymnasium in 1914 and entered the S. M. Kirov Military Medical Academy in Petrograd (now
Saint Petersburg Saint Petersburg, formerly known as Petrograd and later Leningrad, is the List of cities and towns in Russia by population, second-largest city in Russia after Moscow. It is situated on the Neva, River Neva, at the head of the Gulf of Finland ...
), where his professors included the
Nobel Prize The Nobel Prizes ( ; ; ) are awards administered by the Nobel Foundation and granted in accordance with the principle of "for the greatest benefit to humankind". The prizes were first awarded in 1901, marking the fifth anniversary of Alfred N ...
-winning physiologist
Ivan Pavlov Ivan Petrovich Pavlov (, ; 27 February 1936) was a Russian and Soviet experimental neurologist and physiologist known for his discovery of classical conditioning through his experiments with dogs. Pavlov also conducted significant research on ...
.


Medical education

During
World War I World War I or the First World War (28 July 1914 – 11 November 1918), also known as the Great War, was a World war, global conflict between two coalitions: the Allies of World War I, Allies (or Entente) and the Central Powers. Fighting to ...
, Stradiņš was an army doctor on the Russian Western Front and in
Persia Iran, officially the Islamic Republic of Iran (IRI) and also known as Persia, is a country in West Asia. It borders Iraq to the west, Turkey, Azerbaijan, and Armenia to the northwest, the Caspian Sea to the north, Turkmenistan to the nort ...
, and then the chief of a surgical department in
Vladivostok Vladivostok ( ; , ) is the largest city and the administrative center of Primorsky Krai and the capital of the Far Eastern Federal District of Russia. It is located around the Zolotoy Rog, Golden Horn Bay on the Sea of Japan, covering an area o ...
. After graduating from the military medical academy in 1919, he became an institute doctor (i.e., a candidate for an
M.D. degree A Doctor of Medicine (abbreviated MD, from the Latin ) is a medical degree, the meaning of which varies between different jurisdictions. In the United States, and some other countries, the ''MD'' denotes a professional degree of physician. This ge ...
) in the academy's hospital surgery clinic, headed by Professor Sergey Fedorov, the former private surgeon of Tsar
Nicholas II Nicholas II (Nikolai Alexandrovich Romanov; 186817 July 1918) or Nikolai II was the last reigning Emperor of Russia, King of Congress Poland, and Grand Duke of Finland from 1 November 1894 until his abdication on 15 March 1917. He married ...
. Under Fedorov's supervision, Stradiņš completed a
doctoral thesis A thesis (: theses), or dissertation (abbreviated diss.), is a document submitted in support of candidature for an academic degree or professional qualification presenting the author's research and findings.International Standard ISO 7144: D ...
on the treatment of
peripheral nerve injury Nerve injury is an injury to a nerve. There is no single classification system that can describe all the many variations of nerve injuries. In 1941, Herbert Seddon introduced a classification of nerve injuries based on three main types of nerve ...
. It included data from 862 patients on trophic, secretory and
vasomotor Vasomotor refers to actions upon a blood vessel which alter its diameter. More specifically, it can refer to vasodilator action and vasoconstrictor action. Control Sympathetic innervation Sympathetic nerve fibers travel around the tunica media ...
disturbances after injuries to the extremities, and on surgical and nonsurgical treatment methods. In 1919, Stradiņš, working with N. N. Yelanski, I. R. Petrov, and other colleagues, produced the first standard
serum Serum may refer to: Biology and pharmacology *Serum (blood), plasma from which the clotting proteins have been removed **Antiserum, blood serum with specific antibodies for passive immunity *Serous fluid, any clear bodily fluid Places *Serum, Ind ...
for
blood transfusion Blood transfusion is the process of transferring blood products into a person's Circulatory system, circulation intravenously. Transfusions are used for various medical conditions to replace lost components of the blood. Early transfusions used ...
in Soviet Russia. Three years later, he ran an experiment on himself: A periarterial sympathectomy (pioneered by Mathieu Jaboulay) was performed on his left shoulder by V. N. Shamov, and Stradiņš personally evaluated the results. He also carried out physiological and Pharmacology, pharmacological experiments in the laboratories of the physiologist Ivan Pavlov and pharmacologist Nikolai Kravkov. Fedorov regarded Stradiņš as one of his "best and most gifted pupils, and his works on the spontaneous gangrene and operations on nerves as indubitably excellent".


Career


Pre-World War II

Stradiņš returned to Riga at the end of 1923 and joined the faculty of medicine at the newly founded University of Latvia. In 1924, he became the first Rockefeller Foundation, Rockefeller Fellow from Latvia. During his fellowship, he worked under Alfred Washington Adson at the Mayo Clinic Hospital, Saint Mary’s Campus, Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minnesota, as well as under C. C. Choyce at Imperial College London. In 1927, he defended his second doctoral thesis at the University of Latvia, summarizing the results of his research in Petrograd, Rochester, and Riga on the genesis and treatment of obliterating endarteritis. The main results were published in German and Russian medical journals and were recognized by the Latvian Cultural Foundation in 1928. At the end of the 1920s, Stradiņš turned his attention from peripheral neurosurgery to abdominal surgery and Treatment of cancer, cancer treatment. In 1931, he was appointed medical director of the 2nd City Hospital of Riga (now Pauls Stradiņš Clinical University Hospital), which he helped to modernize. In 1933, he became a professor of surgery, a position he held until his death in 1958. From 1927–39, he interacted with research centers all over Europe and adopted foreign innovations in Latvia. He became the country's leading oncology specialist, and in 1935, he founded the first surgical department for cancer treatment at his hospital. In 1938, he founded a specialized cancer hospital in Riga. He paid primary attention to the treatment of inoperable cancer patients, contacted experts from Germany and Austria, and presented his preliminary results on the topic at the 1st Conference of Medical Doctors of the Baltic Countries and Finland, held in 1938 in Helsinki. Stradiņš was one of the most recognized doctors in Latvia because of his successful private practice and his organizational activities in health care. In 1937, during the authoritarian regime of Kārlis Ulmanis, he founded and chaired the Society for Health Promotion (Latvian language, Latvian: ''Veselības veicināšanas biedrība''). The society—which included anti-cancer, anti-tuberculosis, and venereology sections—maintained sanatoriums and organized exhibitions on health care and demography. It also included the Institute of Research of the Nation’s Life Resources (Latvian: ''Tautas dzīvā spēka pētīšanas institūts''), headed by Jacob Prīmanis, which was responsible for demographic, genealogical, and eugenics research on the population of Latvia. Stradiņš was a co-founding member and representative of Latvia at the International Academy for Improvement of Medical Education, founded in Budapest in 1938, and served as the Latvian delegate to several international health organizations. All these activities ceased when Soviet occupation of Latvia in 1940, the Soviet Union annexed Latvia in 1940. During the first year of the Soviet occupation, Stradiņš retained his hospital duties and renewed contacts with his former colleagues in Soviet Russia. But with German occupation of Latvia during World War II, the entrance of Nazi forces in 1941, he was arrested because of his humanitarian aid to Jews and wounded soldiers at his hospital. After his release, he was dismissed from his job, and later also from the cancer hospital, where he had tried to save mentally disabled patients.


Post–World War II

In contrast to the majority of Latvian medical professors and doctors, Stradiņš did not escape to the West during World War II. He was one of the few non-Communist Latvian intellectuals who stayed for patriotic reasons and tried to take positive action under the new conditions, and he thus became a key figure not only in medicine, but also in public activities. Stradiņš served as dean of his hospital's faculty of medicine from 1944 to 1946, as the chief doctor of the clinical hospital from 1944 to 1947, as chairman of the Medicine Science Council at the Health Ministry from 1945 to 1948, and as the chief surgeon and chief oncologist of the Latvian Soviet Socialist Republic. He was elected to the USSR Academy of Medical Sciences in 1945 and nominated as one of the first full members of the newly founded Latvian Academy of Sciences in 1946. Nevertheless, under the ideological repression of the immediate postwar period—driven by Stalinism and the Soviet Union's struggle against Western influences—Stradiņš soon lost his positions in medicine and science. He was dismissed from his main duties and became a victim of ideological campaigns from 1947 to 1949. However, he was allowed to continue working as a professor, and until 1950 he held the position of director of the Institute of Experimental Medicine at the Latvian Academy of Sciences. During the 1940s and 1950s, he conducted research on cancer and was the first to use the nitrofuran agent Furacilin and thiotepa as chemotherapy in the Soviet Union. He also helped educate a generation of Latvian physicians and surgeons, and he founded a museum on the history of medicine. The museum grew out of Stradiņš' private collection, which he began in prewar Latvia. In the 1930s, the collection was on the premises of his clinical hospital. He completed it and donated it to the state in 1957. It was the largest collection on the history of world medicine in the Soviet Union, and in 1958 it was named after Stradiņš. In the last years of his life, after Joseph Stalin's death, Stradiņš was "Rehabilitation (Soviet), rehabilitated" from various charges. From 1955 to 1958, he served as a deputy on the Supreme Soviet of the Latvian SSR, the legislature of Soviet Latvia. In his last months, he organized the first Cardiothoracic surgery, cardiothoracic operations and arranged for official recognition of his museum. He died on 14 August 1958, a year and a half after having a stroke.


Legacy

Stradiņš' name is borne by his museum— Pauls Stradins Museum of the History of Medicine, Pauls Stradiņš Museum for the History of Medicine —as well as by several other institutions, including the Pauls Stradiņš Clinical University Hospital (since 1958) and the P. Stradiņš Health and Social Care College in Jūrmala (since 1989). In 1998, the Riga Medical Institute was reorganized and renamed Riga Stradiņš University. The name was affirmed by Latvia's Parliament, the Saeima, in 2002. Stradiņš was a many-sided physician, active in surgery, oncology, physiotherapy, pharmacology, blood transfusion, urology, and dieting, as well as health care administration. He introduced many modern diagnostic and treatment practices to Latvia and investigated new methods for the early detection of cancer. He was also a member of the editorial boards of three leading Soviet medical journals: ''Klinitcheskaya Medicina'', ''Eksperimental'naya Chirurgija'', and ''Voprosy onkologiji''. He published about 80 scientific papers in Russian, German, Latvian, Polish, Finnish, Lithuanian, and English, and a three-volume, Russian-language edition of his selected works was issued posthumously from 1963–65. He received the Latvian "Croix de la Reconnaissance" in 1938, and the Soviet Order of the Red Banner of Labour, Order of the Red Banner of Labor in 1956. He was a Merited Scientist of the Latvian SSR (1945) and an honorary member (1957) of the N. Pirogov Society, the oldest Russian association for surgeons. The Pauls Stradiņš Award—established in 1983 to honor merits in the history of medicine, and in 1991 to honor merits in medical practice—is Latvia's most prestigious award in the medical sciences.


Family and colleagues

Stradiņš' wife, Ņina Stradiņa (née Malysheva, 1897–1991), was one of the pioneers of physiotherapeutic treatment in Latvia. They had four children: * Irēna Stradiņa (1925–1972), a painter and architect * Maija Sosāre (1926–2008), an English philologist and head of the foreign languages department at the Riga Medical Institute * Jānis Stradiņš (1933–2019), a chemist, science historian, and former president of the Latvian Academy of Sciences * Asja Eglīte (b. 1943), a physician and physiotherapist at Pauls Stradiņš Clinical University Hospital His grandchildren are: * Pauls Stradiņš Jr. (b. 1963), a physicist at the National Renewable Energy Laboratory in Golden, Colorado, and a foreign member of the Latvian Academy of Sciences * Pēteris Stradiņš (b. 1971), a cardiac surgeon, associate professor at Riga Stradiņš University, head of cardiac surgery at Pauls Stradiņš Clinical University Hospital, and corresponding member of the Latvian Academy of Sciences * Andrejs Ērglis (b. 1965), a cardiologist, professor and head of Cardiology and Cardiac Surgery Department at the University of Latvia, and vice president of the Latvian Academy of Sciences * Linda Sosāre (b. 1963), a gastroenterologist and former head of the endoscopy department at Pauls Stradiņš Clinical University Hospital * Māra Sosāre (b. 1957), an English philologist * Adrienna Kalniņa (b. 1953), widow of the cardiologist Uldis Kalniņš Among his closest associates and colleagues were Ēvalds Ezerietis, Vladimirs Utkins, Jānis Slaidiņš, Veronika Rozenbaha, Jevgēnijs Linārs, Lazar Yavorkovski, Ksenija Skulme, Ojārs Aleksis, Eduards Smiltēns, Izidors Sjakste, Velta Bramberga, Rasma Ceplīte, Guntis Vitenbergs, Anna Bormane, Kārlis Dolietis, Mihails Dubinskis, Arturs Rocēns, Valdis Kraulis, Pāvils Purviņš, Vilhelms Pampe, Jānis Erdmanis, and Aleksandrs Marovskis.


Notes

* Akadēmiķis Pauls Stradiņš. Bibliogrāfija. Rīga, 1959 (in Latvian, Russian) * Professors Pauls Stradiņš dzīvē un darbā. Rīga, 1961 (in Latvian) * A. Vīksna. Paula Stradiņa dzīves un darbības vietas. Rīga, 1973 (in Latvian), 1978 (Russian translation) * J. Stradiņš, K. Ē. Ārons, A. Vīksna. Tāds bija mūsu laiks. Veltījums P. Stradiņa 100gadei. Rīga, 1996. 491 p. (in Latvian) * J. Stradiņš, J. Salaks. (Edit.) Materials about Pauls Stradins and his museum. Acta Medico-Historica Rigensia. Vol. VIII. Rīga, 2007. 430 p. (in Latvian, Russian, English) * Страдынь П. И. Избранные труды. Рига, т. 1-3, 1963—1965 (Selected works, in Russian) * Павел Иванович Страдынь — врач, ученый, человек. Отв. ред. В. В. Канеп. Рига: Зинатне, 1967. 392 с. (in Russian)


References


External links

{{DEFAULTSORT:Stradins, Pauls 1896 births 1958 deaths People from Jēkabpils Municipality People from Courland Governorate Members of the Supreme Soviet of the Latvian Soviet Socialist Republic, 1955–1959 Latvian surgeons Physicians from the Russian Empire Expatriates from the Russian Empire in Iran Soviet surgeons S.M. Kirov Military Medical Academy alumni Academic staff of the University of Latvia Academic staff of Riga Stradiņš University Corresponding Members of the USSR Academy of Medical Sciences Academicians of the Latvian SSR Academy of Sciences Russian military personnel of World War I Recipients of the Order of the Red Banner of Labour 20th-century Latvian physicians