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  1. Emile Theodor Kocher (Berna, 25 de agosto de 1841-Berna, 27 de julio de 1917) fue un médico suizo [1] galardonado con el Premio Nobel de Medicina en 1909 por sus trabajos sobre los tratamientos sobre las afecciones de la glándula tiroides.

  2. Emil Theodor Kocher (25 August 1841 – 27 July 1917) was a Swiss physician and medical researcher who received the 1909 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine for his work in the physiology, pathology and surgery of the thyroid.

  3. Kocher perfeccionó los diversos procedimientos de tiroidectomía, extirpaciones y resecciones, de sus maestros Lücke y Billroth. Regló algunos y diseñó instrumentos como su pinza de hemostasia ("fórceps de Kocher") y una sonda especial para disecar la tiroides y su cápsula.

  4. Emil Theodor Kocher (Berna, 1841 - 1917) Cirujano suizo. En 1909 recibió el Premio Nobel de Fisiología y Medicina por sus grandes aportaciones sobre la fisiología, la patología y la cirugía de la glándula tiroides.

  5. 19 de mar. de 2024 · Emil Theodor Kocher (born Aug. 25, 1841, Bern, Switz.—died July 27, 1917, Bern) was a Swiss surgeon who won the 1909 Nobel Prize for Physiology or Medicine for his work on the thyroid gland. After qualifying in medicine at the University of Bern in 1865, Kocher studied in Berlin , London, Paris, and Vienna , where he was a pupil of ...

  6. Kocher was the first Swiss to hold a surgical chair, when succeeding his former chief in Bern, Albert Lücke, as professor of surgery (1872). Despite attempts to persuade him to move to Prague, Vienna and Berlin, Kocher remained in Bern, and was active there until his death on 27 July 1917.

  7. Hace 4 días · Overview. Emil Theodor Kocher. (1841—1917) Quick Reference. (1841–1917) Swiss surgeon. Kocher, an engineer's son from Bern in Switzerland, graduated in medicine from the university there in 1865. He later studied surgery in Berlin, Paris, and in London under Joseph Lister, and in Vienna under Theodor Billroth.