Yuri Lvovich Nuller was a Soviet and Russian psychiatrist and professor
Education
Yuri went on with his studies, and in 1959 had graduated from the First Leningrad Medical Institute and started working at Svirsky mental hospital, a former Alexander-Svirsky Monastery and Svirlag concentration camp. After several months" work he became a head of the acute ward, and in two years defended a Doctor of Philosophy thesis, "A strategy for clinical trials of antidepressant drugs and its implementation in the trials of chloracizine and phenylethylhydrazine".
Career
He spent many years investigating the problem of anxiety. Yuri"s father, Lev Moiseevich Nuller, a Soviet diplomat in France, was recalled from abroad with his family in 1938, arrested and executed by People’s Commissariat of Internal Affairs on July 28, 1941. In 1950 Yuri himself was arrested under the preposterous accusation that he had been recruited by France"s secret service at the age of three.
He was sentenced to 10 years in camps and freed only in 1955, two years after Stalin"s death.
In 1972 he upheld a thesis for a Doktor nauk degree, "Clinical investigations of antidepressant drugs". As a person, Yuri is remembered for his kindness, morality and superb intellectual qualities that put him in the ranks of Russian intelligentsia.
He abstained from visible dissident activities, but befriended some dissidents known in the West. As a psychiatrist, Yuri Nuller was noted for his high professionalism.
Novel psychotropic medications were introduced in his clinic, and he strived to create new treatment strategies, aiming primarily to relieve anxiety.
His technique was christened a "Diazepam test": high doses of the drug were introduced acutely and the psychiatrist tried to interpret, judging on the changing anxiety level and the symptoms that became more prominent, what may have caused the disorder. Yuri Nuller had more than 130 publications and became an author of two books During the last 12 years of his life he was the head of a department at the Saint St. Petersburg V. M. Bekhterev Psychoneurological Research Institute.
Views
He was a thesis advisor, with two Doctor of Philosophy and five doctoral dissertations defended under his supervision.