Background
He was the son of anatomist József Lenhossék (1818-1888) and an uncle to Albert Szent-Györgyi (1893-1986). In 1886 he obtained his medical doctorate at Budapest, afterwards working in his father"s anatomical institute.
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He was the son of anatomist József Lenhossék (1818-1888) and an uncle to Albert Szent-Györgyi (1893-1986). In 1886 he obtained his medical doctorate at Budapest, afterwards working in his father"s anatomical institute.
In 1889 he became prosector at the University of Basel, later performing similar duties at the University of Würzburg (1892-1895). Afterwards he was an associate professor of anatomy at the University of Tübingen, and from 1900 was a professor of anatomy at the University of Budapest. Lenhossék is largely remembered for his research in the field of neuroanatomy, that included important histological studies of the nervous system.
In 1893 he coined the term "astrocyte" to describe a star-shaped cell found in the central nervous system.
"Henneguy–Lenhossek theory": Theory that proposes that mitotic centrioles and ciliary basal kinetosomes are fundamentally similar structures. Named with French embryologist Louis-Félix Henneguy (1850–1928).
Lenhossék describes his findings in an 1898 paper titled Über Flimmerzellen. "Lenhossek"s processes": Short processes ("aborted axons") possessed by some ganglion cells.
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(Lang:- German, Pages 169. Reprinted in 2015 with the help...)
Hungarian Academy of Sciences.