Samuel Goldflam

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Samuel Wulfowicz Goldfalm, Samuel Vulfovitsj Goldflam, Polish neurologist, born February 22, 1852, Warsaw; died August 26, 1932. He is best known for brilliant analysis (1893)of myasthenia gravis (Erb-Goldflam syndrome).

Samuel Vulfovitsj Goldflam received his education in his native city of Warsaw. He graduated from high school in 1869 and then studied medicine at the University in Warsaw. He qualified in 1875 and then worked in internal medicine at the Holy Ghost Hospital under professor Wilhelm Dusan Lambl's (1824-1895), known for the giardia parasite now known as lamblia intestinalis. Lambl was not much of a mentor, so Goldflam worked largely by himself. His position at the internal clinic supplied him an ample research material. At that time internal and neurology patients were together in Lamb’s clinic. In 1882 he studied with the famous neurologists Karl Friedrich Otto Westphal (1833-1890) and Jean-Martin Charcot (1825-1893) and then returned to Warsaw to teach neurology in the manner of the grand masters. After a new period in the Holy Ghost Hospital in Lambl’s clinic, he established his own clinic on Graniczna 10 street in Warsaw for underprivileged patients which he run for almost 40 years.

During the First World War Goldflam worked as a volunteer in the Jewish Hospital with his great friend, the neurologist, Edward Flatau (1869-1932). During the war he was one of the first to notice correspondence between malnourishment and diseases and he documented bone and joints disease under the name osteoarthropathia dysalimentaria (1918). His main interest, however, was in the significance of reflexes, neurological aspects of syphilis and eye reflexes.

Goldflam was sharp clinician with ability to recognize small clues of illness which often escaped attention his colleagues. He works not only with patients but also was an anathomopathologist. His profound observations and publications were recognized in Poland and in the world.

Goldflam established the Jewish Society for Mental Disorders and established the „Sophia” clinic for mental patients in Otwock, and Berson and Bauman Children’s Hospital in Warsaw. Together with Flatau he established the Pathology Scientific Institute and, also with Flatau, the medical periodical Warszawskie Czasopismo Naukowe, Goldflam was a full member of the Warsaw Scientific Society (Towarzystwo Naukowe Warszawskie). He helped many social causes together with Janusz Korczak and Gerszon Lewin.

A genius in neurology, Goldflam was also an artist and an expert on Beethoven, and he helped many aspiring artists in establishing their careers including Artur Rubinstein. He died in 1932, the same year as two other Polish great neurologists, Edward Flatau (born 1869) and Joseph Jules François Félix Babinski (born 1857).

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