Background
Schamberg was born on November 6, 1870 in Philadelphia Pennsylvania, United States, the son of Gustav and Emma (Frank) Schamberg.
(Excerpt from Vaccination and Its Relation to Animal Exper...)
Excerpt from Vaccination and Its Relation to Animal Experimentation It is alleged that in Mexico smallpox has exterminated Whole tribes of Indians, sparing no one to tell the story of the annihilation. Robertson refers to smallpox among the South Ameri can Indians as follows z In consequence of this various calamities, together with the introduction of the smallpox, a malady unknown in Amer ica, and extremely fatal to the natives, the number of the peo ple both in New Spain and Peru was so much reduced that in a few years the accounts of their ancient population appeared almost incredible. Catlin6 states that, of American Indians, fell victims to smallpox. Washington Irving's Astoria makes mention of ter rible epidemics of smallpox among the Indians in which almost entire tribes were destroyed. Lloyd, who translated Prince Maximilian's Travels in the Interior of North America, states in the preface. About the Publisher Forgotten Books publishes hundreds of thousands of rare and classic books. Find more at www.forgottenbooks.com This book is a reproduction of an important historical work. Forgotten Books uses state-of-the-art technology to digitally reconstruct the work, preserving the original format whilst repairing imperfections present in the aged copy. In rare cases, an imperfection in the original, such as a blemish or missing page, may be replicated in our edition. We do, however, repair the vast majority of imperfections successfully; any imperfections that remain are intentionally left to preserve the state of such historical works.
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(The study of dermatology in its broadest sense embraces t...)
The study of dermatology in its broadest sense embraces the consideration of all morbid processes that are characterized by cutaneous manifestations. This conception of the subject, which follows that of the old Vienna school, lends to dermatology greater dignity and gives to it a more important mission. The specialist in diseases of the skin should be skilled in the diagnosis not only of the ordinary dermatoses, but of the rashes of the various eruptive fevers. The two classes of afifections frequently resemble each other to such a degree as to require for their differentiation a broad experience in both. The striking manner in which syphi Usmay simulate small-pox is well known. The eruption of syphilis is, properly considered, no more entitled to be included among skin diseases than is that of smallpox; the former constitutes the most conspicuous symptom of a chronic infectious process, while the exanthem of variola represents the most striking feature of an acute infectious process. In the present volume the exanthemata are treated in a separate chapter, and, owing to the importance attaching to their diagnosis, are given greater space than is usually accorded to them in books on skin diseases. The general symptoms are described briefly, but all that relates to the skin manifestations is exhaustively treated. In addition to a consideration of the diseases ordinarily included among the exanthemata, there are described the usual and the accidental eruptions occurring in the course of such diseases as typhoid fever, typhus fever, epidemic cerebrospinal meningitis, influenza, malaria, rheumatic fever, dengue, miliary fever, angina, and tonsillitis. Space does not permit of the description of the general symptoms of these diseases, but merely of the eruptive phenomena. (Typographical errors above are due to OCR software and don't occur in the book.) About the Publisher Forgotten Books is a publisher of
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dermatologist physician professor syphilogist
Schamberg was born on November 6, 1870 in Philadelphia Pennsylvania, United States, the son of Gustav and Emma (Frank) Schamberg.
Schamberg attended the public schools and graduated from the University of Pennsylvania in 1892 with the degree of M. D. After serving an interneship in the university hospital for eighteen months, he spent a year in the post-graduate study of dermatology in Vienna, Berlin, Hamburg, Paris, and London.
After studies Jay Frank began the practice of medicine in Philadelphia. Shortly thereafter he was appointed lecturer on infectious eruptive fevers in the University of Pennsylvania and in 1900 professor of dermatology in the Philadelphia Polyclinic and College of Graduates in Medicine. When this institution was affiliated with the Graduate School of Medicine of the University of Pennsylvania in 1919, he was appointed professor of dermatology and syphilology, a position he held until the time of his death.
In the meantime he also held for brief periods the professorship in dermatology and syphilology in the Temple University school of medicine and the Jefferson Medical College.
In 1912 he organized the Dermatological Research Laboratories and during the World War, with Dr. John A. Kolmer and Dr. George W. Raiziss, succeeded in synthesizing arsphenamin and neoarsphenamin at a time when supplies of these compounds for the treatment of syphilis were not available. The funds accruing were set aside for medical research and resulted in the establishment of the Research Institute of Cutaneous Medicine, Philadelphia, of which he was director until the time of his death.
In 1912 he served as a member of the Pennsylvania state vaccination commission; in 1920-21 as president of the American Dermatological Association; in 1931 as president of the Philadelphia County Medical Society, and in 1928-29 as chairman of the section on dermatology and syphilology of the American Medical Association. From 1927 to 1934 he served on the editorial board of Archives of Dermatology and Syphilology. He was a corresponding member of the dermatological societies of France, Denmark, and the Argentine Republic.
In 1901 he described a progressive pigmentary disease of the skin since known as Schamberg's disease (British Journal of Dermatology, January 1901). He workeded on "grain itch" in collaboration with Dr. Joseph Goldberger, reported in Epidemic of an Urticarioid Dermatitis Due to a Small Mite in the Straw of Mattresses (1909).
He died in 1934.
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A man of calm demeanor, whose earnestness and cheerfulness were unchanging, Schamberg was gifted with an equal enthusiasm for work and for play, and had to an unusual degree the power of stimulating and inspiring his associates.
On October 11, 1905, Schamberg married May Ida Bamberger of New York; they had a son and a daughter: Elizabeth and Ira Leo.