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Christiaan
Eijkman
was born on August 11, 1858, at Nijkerk in Gelderland (The Netherlands),
the seventh child of Christiaan Eijkman, the headmaster of a local school,
and Johanna Alida Pool.
A year later, in 1859, the Eijkman family moved to Zaandam, where his
father was appointed head of a newly founded school for advanced elementary
education. It was here that Christiaan and his brothers received their
early education. In 1875, after taking his preliminary examinations, Eijkman
became a student at the Military Medical School of the University of Amsterdam,
where he was trained as a medical officer for the Netherlands Indies Army,
passing through all his examinations with honours.
From 1879 to 1881, he was an assistant of T. Place, Professor of Physiology,
during which time he wrote his thesis On Polarization of the Nerves,
which gained him his doctor's degree, with honours, on July 13, 1883.
That same year he left Holland for the Indies, where he was made medical
officer of health first in Semarang later at Tjilatjap, a small village
on the south coast of Java, and at Padang Sidempoean in W. Sumatra. It
was at Tjilatjap that he caught malaria which later so impaired his health
that he, in 1885, had to return to Europe on sick-leave.
For Eijkman this was to prove a lucky event, as it enabled him to work
in E. Forster's laboratory in Amsterdam, and also in
Robert Koch's bacteriological
laboratory in Berlin; here he came into contact with A. C. Pekelharing
and C. Winkler, who were visiting the German capital before their departure
to the Indies. In this way medical officer Christiaan Eijkman was seconded
as assistant to the Pekelharing-Winkler mission, together with his colleague
M. B. Romeny. This mission had been sent out by the Dutch Government to
conduct investigations into beriberi, a disease which at that time was
causing havoc in that region.
In 1887, Pekelharing and Winkler were recalled, but before their departure
Pekelharing proposed to the Governor General that the laboratory which
had been temporarily set up for the Commission in the Military Hospital
in Batavia should be made permanent. This proposal was readily accepted,
and Christiaan Eijkman was appointed its first Director, at the same time
being made Director of the "Dokter Djawa School" (Javanese Medical School).
Thus ended Eijkman's short military career - now he was able to devote
himself entirely to science.
Eijkman was Director of the "Geneeskundig Laboratorium" (Medical Laboratory)
from January 15, 1888 to March 4, 1896, and during that time he made a
number of his most important researches. These dealt first of all with
the physiology of people living in tropical regions. He was able to demonstrate
that a number of theories had no factual basis. Firstly he proved that
in the blood of Europeans living in the tropics the number of red corpuscles,
the specific gravity, the serum, and the water content, undergo no change,
at least when the blood is not affected by disease which will ultimately
lead to anaemia. Comparing the metabolism of the European with that of
the native, he found that in the tropics as well in the temperate zone,
this is entirely governed by the work carried out. Neither could he find
any disparity in respiratory metabolism, perspiration, and temperature
regulation. Thus Eijkman put an end to a number of speculations on the
acclimatization of Europeans in the tropics which had hitherto necessitated
the taking of various precautions.
But Eijkman's greatest work was in an entirely different field. He discovered,
after the departure of Pekelharing and Winkler, that the real cause of
beriberi was the deficiency of some vital substance in the staple food
of the natives, which is located in the so-called "silver skin" (pericarpium)
of the rice. This discovery has led to the concept of vitamins. This important
achievement earned him the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine for 1929.
This late recognition of his outstanding merits has ended all criticism
of his work. In addition to his work on beriberi, he occupied himself
with other problems such as arach fermentation, and indeed still had time
to write two textbooks for his students at the Java Medical School, one
on physiology and the other on organic chemistry.
In 1898 he became successor to G. Van Overbeek de Meyer, as Professor
in Hygiene and Forensic Medicine at Utrecht. His inaugural speech was
entitled Over Gezondheid en Ziekten in Tropische Gewesten (On health
and diseases in tropical regions). At Utrecht, Eijkman turned to the study
of bacteriology, and carried out his well-known fermentation test, by
means of which it can be readily established if water has been polluted
by human and animal defaecation containing coli bacilli. Another research
was into the rate of mortality of bacteria as a result of various external
factors, whereby he was able to show that this process could not be represented
by a logarithmic curve. This was followed by his investigation of the
phenomenon that the rate of growth of bacteria on solid substratum often
decreases, finally coming to a halt. Beyerinck's auxanographic method
was applied on several occasions by Eijkman, as for example during the
secretion of enzymes which break down casein or bring about haemolysis,
whereby he could demonstrate the hydrolysis of fats under the influence
of lipases.
As a lecturer he was known for his clarity of speech and demonstration,
his great practical knowledge standing him in good stead. He had a preeminently
critical mind and he continuously warned his students against the acceptance
of dogmas. But Eijkman did not confine himself to the University he also
engaged himself in problems of water supply, housing, school hygiene,
physical education; as a member of the Gezondheidsraad (Health Council)
and the Gezondheidscommissie (Health Commission) he participated in the
struggle against alcoholism and tuberculosis. He was the founder of the
Vereeniging tot Bestrijding van de Tuberculose (Society for the struggle
against tuberculosis ).
His unassuming personality has contributed to the fact that his great
merits were at first not really appreciated in his own country; but anyone
who had the privilege of coming into close contact with him, quickly perceived
his keen intellect and extensive knowledge.
In 1907, Eijkman was appointed Member of the Royal Academy of Sciences
(The Netherlands), after having been Correspondent since 1895. The Dutch
Government conferred upon him several orders of knighthood, whereas on
the occasion of the 25th anniversary of his professorship a fund has been
established to enable the awarding of the Eijiman Medal. But the crown
of all his work was the award of the Nobel Prize in 1929.
Eijkman was holder of the John Scott Medal, Philadelphia, and Foreign
Associate of the National Academy of Sciences in Washington. He was also
Honorary Fellow of the Royal Sanitary Institute in London.
In 1883, before his departure to the Indies, Eijkman married Aaltje Wigeri
van Edema, who died in 1886. In Batavia, Professor Eijkman married Bertha
Julie Louise van der Kemp in 1888; a son, Pieter Hendrik, who became a
physician, was born in 1890.
He died in Utrecht, on November 5, 1930, after a protracted illness.
From
Nobel Lectures, Physiology or Medicine 1922-1941.
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