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Bernardo
Alberto Houssay was born in Buenos Aires, Argentina, on April 10, 1887,
one of the eight children of Dr. Albert and Clara (née Laffont) Houssay,
who had come to Argentina from France. His father was a barrister. His
early education was at a private school, the Colegio Britanico. He then
entered the School of Pharmacy of the University of Buenos Aires at the
exceptionally early age of 14, graduating in 1904. He had already begun
studying medicine and, in 1907, before completing his studies, he took
up a post in the Department of Physiology. He began here his research
on the hypophysis which resulted in his M.D.-thesis (1911), a thesis which
earned him a University prize.
In 1910 he was appointed Professor of Physiology in the University's School
of Veterinary Medicine. During this time he had been doing hospital practice
and, in 1913, became Chief Physician at the Alvear Hospital. In addition
to this he was also in charge of the Laboratory of Experimental Physiology
and Pathology in the National Department of Hygiene from 1915 to 1919.
In 1919 he became Professor of Physiology in the Medical School at Buenos
Aires University. He also organized the Institute of Physiology at the
Medical School, making it a centre with an international reputation. He
remained Professor and Director of the Institute until 1943. In this year
the Government then in power deprived him of his post, as a result of
his voicing his opinion that there should be effective democracy in the
country. Although receiving many invitations from abroad, he continued
his work in an institute which he organized with the support of funds
contributed by the Sauberan Foundation and other bodies. This was the
Instituto de Biologia y Medicina Experimental, where he still remains
as Director. In 1955 a new Government reinstated him in the University.
He has worked in
almost every field of physiology, having a special interest in the endocrine
glands. He has made a lifelong study of the hypophysis and his most important
discovery concerns the role of the anterior lobe of the hypophysis in
carbohydrate metabolism and the onset of diabetes. He has worked on many
other topics in physiology and pharmacology, including the physiology
of circulation and respiration, the processes of immunity, the nervous
system, digestion, and snake and spider venoms.
Apart from his research, he has been active in promoting the advancement
of university and medical education, and of scientific research, in Argentina.
Dr. Houssay is the
author of over 500 papers and of several books. He has won many prizes
ranging in time from that of the National Academy of Sciences, Buenos
Aires, in 1923, to the Dale Medal of the Society of Endocrinology (London)
in 1960.
He holds honorary
degrees of twenty-five universities and is a member of the Argentine National
Academy of Medicine, the Academy of Letters, the National Academy of Sciences
of Buenos Aires, the Academy of Moral and Political Sciences of Buenos
Aires, and of the Pontifical Academy of Sciences. He is honorary professor
of 15 universities, foreign associate of 11 academies or learned societies,
member (honorary or correspondent) of 38 Academies, 16 Societies of Biology,
11 of Endocrinology, 7 of Physiology and 5 of Cardiology. He has been
decorated by the governments of several countries.
He married Dr. Maria
Angelica Catan, a chemist, who died in 1962. They have three sons, Alberto,
Hector, and Raul.
From Nobel Lectures,
Physiology or Medicine 1942-1962.
Dr Houssay died in
1971.
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