Otto Friedrich Ranke
Otto Friedrich Ranke | |
---|---|
Born |
17th August 1899 Munich, Germany |
Died |
19th November 1959, age 60 Erlangen, Germany |
Citizenship | German |
Fields | physiology |
Alma mater | University of Munich, University of Freiburg, University of Heidelberg |
Doctoral advisor | Ludwig Aschoff, Philipp Broemser |
Known for | interest in methamphetamine and performance enhancing drugs |
Otto Friedrich Ranke (born 17 August 1899 in Munich; died 19th November 1959 in Erlangen) was a German physiologist and university professor. Ranke introduced methamphetamine as a performance enhancer in the Wehrmacht during World War II.
Early Years and Education
Ranke, whose father was the psychiatrist Karl Ranke (1861-1951), graduated after completing his study of medicine at the Universities of Munich and Freiburg. In Freiburg Ranke received a medical doctorate under Ludwig Aschoff with a dissertation entitled "On the change of the elastic resistance of the aortic intima and resulting formation of atheroma." [1] Ranke studied mathematics at the Munich Technical University until 1925 with the aid of a grant from the Rockefeller Foundation. He became an assistant at the Institute of Pathology of the University of Freiburg under Philipp Broemser,[2] and worked from 1928 to 1935 at the Physiological Institutes of Universities of Basel and Heidelberg.[3] Ranke obtained his science doctorate in 1931 from the University of Heidelberg with a thesis entitled "The Rectifier Resonance Theory: An extension of the Helmholtz resonance theory of hearing by physical examination of cochlear fluid oscillations."
Political and Military Activities
Ranke joined the Sturmabteilung (SA) and was a member of the National Socialist Teachers League. In 1935, Ranke joined the Aviation Medical Research Institute of the Military Medical Academy in Berlin, where Hubertus Strughold worked. Ranke was promoted in 1936 to associate professor at the University of Berlin. From 1937 to 1945 Ranke headed the Military Medical Academy and the Institute of General and Military Physiology. Ranke joined the Wehrmacht in 1939 and conducted research at the Military Medical Academy for Aviation Medicine on thermoregulation and nutritional physiology. Ranke also served as an advisory officer to the military. As a medical staff officer Ranke took part in the conference, “Medical Problems Arising from Sea and Winter,” (Tagung über Ärztliche Fragen bei Seenot und Wintertod) August 26 and 27 1942 in Nuremberg, where the hypothermia experiments in the Dachau concentration camp were presented. Along with Karl Brandt, Ranke was, from 1944, a member of multiple scientific advisory boards.
Introduces military methamphetamine
In an effort to make its front-line soldiers and fighter pilots fight longer, harder, and with less concern for individual safety, the German army ordered them to take military-issue pills made from methamphetamine and a primarily cocaine-based stimulant. After Pervitin, a methamphetamine drug newly developed by the Berlin-based Temmler pharmaceutical company, first entered the civilian market in 1938, it quickly became a top seller among the German population. The drug was brought to the attention of Ranke, at the time a military doctor and director of the Institute for General and Defense Physiology at Berlin's Academy of Military Medicine.[4] The effects of amphetamines are similar to those of the adrenaline produced by the body, triggering a heightened state of alert. In most people, the substance increases self-confidence, concentration, and willingness to take risks while at the same time reducing sensitivity to pain, hunger, thirst, and the need for sleep. In September 1939, Ranke tested the drug on 90 university students and concluded that Pervitin could help the Wehrmacht win the war. Cocaine, whose effects substantially overlap with those of amphetamine but feature greater euphoria, was later added to the formulation to increase potency through the multiplicative effects of drug interaction and to reinforce use by individuals.
Some medical authorities criticized this drug regimen, with distributed pills numbered in the millions, as having the negative consequence that many soldiers became addicted to drugs and useless in any military capacity, whether combat or supporting.
Later Years and Death
After the war, Ranke became head of the University of Erlangen Physiological Institute. In 1946, after three months, the American military government cashiered him. From mid-September 1947 until his death, Ranke was professor of physiology at the University of Erlangen and at the same time director of the Physiological Institute.[5] His research interests were sensory and nutritional physiology and physiology of metabolism. Ranke was author of many scientific publications. In 1950 together with Konrad Lang he edited a textbook of Metabolism and Nutrition. Ranke died in 1959 unexpectedly of an arterial thrombosis in his sleep.
References
- ↑ Rudolf Vierhaus (Hrsg.): Deutsche biographische Enzyklopädie. 2. Auflage. Band 8, Saur, München 2007, ISBN 978-3-598-25038-5, S. 177.
- ↑ P. Broemser and O. F. Ranke, Über die Messung des Schlagvolumens des Herzens auf unblutigem Weg. (Bloodless measurement of cardiac output) Z. Biol. 90, 467 (1930). 213 citations on Google Scholar (December 13, 2016)
- ↑ Wolf-Dieter Keidel: Otto F. Ranke †. In: Ergebnisse der Physiologie. Band 51 (1960), S. 20–37 (Digitalisat; PDF; 462 kB).
- ↑ Ulrich, Andreas (May 6, 2005). "The Nazi Death Machine: Hitler's Drugged Soldiers". Der Spiegel.
- ↑ Karl-Heinz Plattig (Zusammenstellung): Zur Geschichte des Institutes., Website des Instituts für Physiologie und Pathophysiologie der FAU.