Abstract (english) | While the first traces of interest in skin diseases date back
to the 14th century recipes from Glagolitic manuscripts, the scientific beginnings
of dermatovenereology might be associated with the beginning
of the 19th century, when in the Rijeka region a ‘new disease’, called
after the village of Škrljevo, was studied by Giovanni Battista Cambieri.
This, however, has not been the only disease named after a Croatian
toponym; in 1826, Luca Stulli of Dubrovnik was the first to describe the
‘mal de Meleda’, nowadays recognized as a form of hereditary palmoplantar
keratoderma. In 1876, Carl Heizmann, a Croatian from Vinkovci
by birth, was one of the founders of the American Dermatological Association.
In 1894, the first department for dermatologic and venereologic
patients was opened at Sestre milosrdnice (Sisters of Charity) Hospital
in Zagreb. The beginning of the 20th century brought an accelerated
development to Croatian dermatovenereology; in 1910, while still in its
experimental phase, the drug Salvarsan was used in Zagreb for the
treatment of syphilis. In 1921, the chair of dermatovenereology was established
at Zagreb School of Medicine, and in 1927, Franjo Kogoj was
the first to describe the spongiform pustule. In 1950, Ante Vukas from
Rijeka developed a special method of epidermotectoscopy. If one remembers
that the first history of AIDS was written by the Croatian Mirko
Dražen Grmek, it would be allowed to concur that the history of dermatology
and venereology on the Croatian soil has been characterized by
a fascinating profusion and dynamism |