Template:Short description Template:Infobox person
Christian Harald Lauritz Peter Emil Bohr (14 February 1855 - 3 February 1911) was a Danish physician, father of the physicist and Nobel laureate Niels Bohr, as well as the mathematician and football player Harald Bohr and grandfather of another physicist and Nobel laureate Aage Bohr. He married Ellen Adler in 1881.
Personal lifeEdit
He wrote his first scientific paper, "Om salicylsyrens indflydelse på kødfordøjelsen" ("On salicylic acid's influence on the digestion of meat"), at the age of 22. He received his medical degree in 1880, studied under Carl Ludwig at University of Leipzig, took a Ph.D. in physiology and was appointed professor of physiology at the University of Copenhagen in 1886.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>
On his religious views, Bohr was raised as a Lutheran Christian. He was an atheist in later life.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>
Christian Bohr is buried in the Assistens Kirkegård.
PhysiologyEdit
In 1891, he was the first to characterize dead space.<ref>Bohr C. Über die Lungenatmung. Skand Arch Physiol 2: 236–268, 1891.</ref><ref>Template:Cite journal article Template:Webarchive</ref>
In 1904, Christian Bohr described the phenomenon, now called the Bohr effect, whereby hydrogen ions and carbon dioxide heterotopically decrease hemoglobin's oxygen-binding affinity. This regulation increases the efficiency of oxygen release by hemoglobin in tissues, like active muscle tissue, where rapid metabolization has produced relatively high concentrations of hydrogen ions and carbon dioxide.
ReferencesEdit
<references/>
SourcesEdit
- Fredericia, L.S. (1932) Christian Bohr, pp. 173–176 in: Meisen, V. Prominent Danish Scientists through the Ages. University Library of Copenhagen 450th Anniversary. Levin & Munksgaard, Copenhagen.