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Addison, Thomas

Complete Dictionary of Scientific Biography | 2008 | Copyright 2008 Gale, Cengage Learning. All rights reserved.. (Hide copyright information) Copyright

Addison, Thomas

(b. Long Benton, England, ca. April 1793; d. Brighton, England, 29 June 1860)

medicine.

Although the birth date generally assigned to Thomas Addison is April 1793, the tablet in Guys Hospital Chapel in London and that in Lanercost Abbey in Cumberland, where he is buried, state that he died on 29 June 1860, at the age of sixty-eight, The Long Benton church baptismal register has the following entry: 1795, Oct. 11. Thomas s. of Joseph and Sarah Addison, Lg. Benton. The same register gives 13 April 1794 as the baptismal date of John, the second son of Joseph and Sarah Addison Since its is unlikely that if Thomas had been bon in 1793 his baptism would have been deferred until after that of his younger brother, it is reasonable to believe that in the course of transcription a five has become a three, as hale white suggested

Addison married Elizabeth Catherine Hauxwell at Lanercost church in September 1847 They were childless, although she had two children by her first marriage

Addison was first sent to school near Long Benton, and then went to a grammar school at Newcastle-onTyne. He learned Latin so well that he made notes in that language and spoke it fluently. His father had wished him to become a lawyer, but in 1812 he entered the University of Edinburgh as a medical student. He graduated in 1815, at the age of twenty-two, as a Doctor of Medicine. The title of his thesis wasDe syphilide et hydrargyro (Concerning Syphilis and Mercury). Guys Medical School book records his entrance: Dec. 13, 1817, from Edinburgh, T. Addison, M.D., paid £22-Is. t o be a perpetual Physicians Pupil..

Addison became house surgeon at Lock Hospital in London in 1815 and was appointed assistant physician to Guys Hospital on 14 January 1824. He became lecturer on materia medica three years later. He was joint lecturer on medicine with Richard Bright in 1835, and in 1837 he became physician to Guys Hospital. In 1840 Bright retired from the lectureship, and Addison became sole lecturer. He held this position until either 1854 or 1855. He obtained his licentiateship in the Royal College of Physicians on 22 December 1819 and was elected a fellow on 4 July 1838.

Addisons numerous clinical studies include works on the clinical signs of fatty liver 1836 appendicitis (1839) pneumonia (1843) phthisis (1845) and xanthoma (1851) In 1849 he described Addison anemia before meeting of the South London Medical Society: For a long period I had from time do time met with a remarkable from of general anemiua... His clinical findings fit with both vitamin B12 and folic acid deficiency states. One feature peculiar to Vitamin B12 deficiency is ... the bulkiness of the general frame and the obesity often present, a most striking contrast..

In the absence of a separate formal report it is not surprising that the world overlooked this excellent description of pernicious anemia. That description, good as its was, was quite overshadowed by Addisons spectacular discovery of the disturbance of the supra-renal capsules In 1855 in a paper entitled On the Constitutional and Local Effects of Disease of the Suprarenal Capsules, he described what is now known as Addisons disease, a condition characterized by progressive anemia, bronze skin pigmentation, severe weakness, and low blood pressure. It is now known that in Addisons disease the blood sodium and chloride are lowered, potassium and nitrogen are increased, and there is a diminution in the blood volume. The intravenous administration of a physiologic solution of sodium chloride helps the patient to recover from these conditions. This work laid the foundation for modern endocrinology.

At Guys Hospital both conditions became increasingly familiar and were recorded separately from time to time in Guys Hospital Reports, but elsewhere Addisons description of anemia was forgotten until his pupils Samuel Wilks and Thomas Daldy published his collected work and made it clear that Addison had described the disease in 1849, although A. Biermer reported it as a new disease in 1872.

In 1839 Bright and Addison published Elements of Practical Medicine. Only Volume I (two volumes were planned) appeared, and the work is incomplete and very rare.

Probably the best evaluation of Addison comes from Wilks, who said: The personal power which he possessed was the secret of his position, much superior to what Bright could ever claim, and equal, if not greater, than that of Sir Astley Cooper.

On 7 July 1860 the Medical Times and Gazette published a notice of Addisons death on 29 June 1860, but neither Lancet nor the British Medical Journal recorded it

BIBLIOGRAPHY

I. Original Works. Addisons writings include Observations on Fatty Degeneration of the Liver. in Guys Hospital Reports, 1st Series, 1 (1836), 476485; Elements of the Practice of Medicine (London, 1839), written with Richard Bright: Observations on the Anatomy of the Lungs (1840), in his Collected Writings (London, 1868), pp. 16; Observations on Pneumonia and Its Consequences, in Guys Hospital Reports, 2nd Series, 1 (1843), 365402; On the Pathology of Phthisis, ibid., 3 (1845), 138: Disease Chronic Suprarenal Insufficiency, Usually due to Tuberculosis of Suprarenal Capsule. 1st Announcement, in London Medical Gazette, n.s. 43 (1849), 517518, reprinted in his Collected Writings (London, 1868), pp. 209239, and Medical Classics, 2 (1937), 239244; On a Certain Affection of the Skin, Vitiligoideaa. plana. b. tuberosa, With Remarks, in Guys Hospital Reports, 2nd Series, 7 (1851), 265276, written with William Gull; On the Constitutional and Local Effects of Disease of the Suprarenal Capsules (London, 1855), also in Medical Classics, 2 (1937), 244280; and A Collection of the Published Writings of the Late Thomas Addison, Samuel Wilks and Thomas M. Daldy, eds. (London, 1868).

II. Secondary Literature. More on Addison and his work may be found in Thomas Bateman, in The Roll of the Royal College of Physicians of London, 2nd ed. (London, 1878), III, 1922; A. Biermer, Form von progressiver perniciöser Anämie, in Korresp.-Bl. schweizer Årtze, 2 (1872), 15; Herbert French, Pernicious Anemia, in Clifford Allbutt and Humphrey Davy Rolleston, eds., System of Medicine (London, 1909), V, 728757; William Hale-White, Biography by Sir William Hale-White, in Guys Hospital Reports, 76 (July 1926), 253279; Victor Herbert. The Megaloblastic Anemias, in Modern Medical Monographs (New York and London, 1959), p. 63; and E. R. Long, Addison and His Discovery of Idiopathic Anemia, in Annals of Medical History, 7 (1935), 130-132.

See also Obituary, in Medical Times and Gazette, 2 (1860), 20; and Biography, in The Roll of the Royal College of Physicians of London, 2nd ed. (London, 1878), III, 205.

John A. Benjamin

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