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European Journal of Echocardiography Advance Access originally published online on October 15, 2008
European Journal of Echocardiography 2009 10(1):48-49; doi:10.1093/ejechocard/jen233
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Published on behalf of the European Society of Cardiology. All rights reserved. © The Author 2008. For permissions please email: journals.permissions@oxfordjournals.org.

The inaugurator of transmitted echocardiography: Prof. Dr Wolf-Dieter Keidel

Uwe Nixdorff*

European Prevention Center, Ruhrorter Strasse 195, D-47119 Duisburg, Germany

Received 31 March 2008; accepted after revision 23 August 2008; online publish-ahead-of-print 15 October 2008.

* Tel: +49 203 48460 700; fax: +49 203 48460 799. E-mail address: nixdorff@epc-checkup.de

The first 10% of the full text of this article appears below.

Usually, the inauguration of clinical echocardiography is attributed to Edler and Hertz who published their first paper in 1954,1 followed by Japanese authors in 1956.2 It is less well-known that there was a first description on using ultrasound for investigating the heart by Wolf-Dieter Keidel already a decade earlier3 (Figure 1). His first investigations were conducted at the Physiologic Institute of the University of Erlangen, Germany, which had become prominent scientifically for its research and mathematical definition of human hearing and its work on audible sound. Apparently, the institute also became involved in the study of inaudible ‘sound’.


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Figure 1 Prof. Dr Wolf-Dieter Keidel.

 
In 1949 Keidel presented3 and in 1950 he published4 about the . . . [Full Text of this Article]


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