Carl William Gottschalk (April 28, 1922 – October 15, 1997) was the Kenan Professor and Distinguished Research Professor of Medicine at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. Gottschalk made important discoveries about the function of the kidneys, and helped set government policies that provided dialysis to patients with kidney failure.
Throughout his career, Gottschalk published extensively about the kidney and about the history of kidney research.[1] He is particularly known for his work using micropuncture techniques to study the kidney's ability to concentrate urine, and for the theory of countercurrent multiplication explaining this ability.[1][5][6]
Health policy
In 1967, Gottschalk chaired a U.S. government committee that recommended government support for kidney transplants and artificial kidney machines for patients with kidney failure. His efforts led to Medicare funding of dialysis for these patients, now provided to hundreds of thousands of patients. He also chaired another committee in 1987 concerned with medical ethics.[7]
Awards and honors
Gottschalk was named Kenan Professor of Medicine and Physiology by UNC in 1969.[2][3] He was elected to the American Academy of Arts and Sciences in 1970 and the National Academy of Sciences in 1975, and was from 1976 to 1977 the president of the American Society of Nephrology.[2][3] He was also awarded an honorary doctorate by Roanoke College in 1966,[2] the Homer W. Smith Award of the American Society of Nephrology in 1970,[8] and the David M. Hume Award of the National Kidney Foundation in 1976.[9] On his retirement in 1992, he was named Distinguished Research Professor of Medicine and Physiology;[3] in the same year Roanoke College named him one of 150 Sesquicentennial Distinguished Alumni.[10] After his death, annual lectures in his name were founded both by UNC and by the American Physiological Society.[2]
^Tauck, David L. (2006), "Using a classic paper by Gottschalk and Mylle to teach the countercurrent model of urinary concentration", Advances in Physiology Education, 30 (2): 63–66, doi:10.1152/advan.00070.2005, PMID16709735.
"Carl W. Gottschalk: Expert on Kidneys, Dialysis Advocate", Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, October 20, 1997.
Blythe, William B. (1998), "In memoriam: Carl William Gottschalk (1922–1997)", Kidney International, 53 (1–2): 1–2, doi:10.1038/sj.ki.4490001.
Blythe, William B. (1998), "Carl William Gottschalk", Transactions of the American Clinical and Climatological Association, 109: i–ii, PMC2194339.
Burg, Maurice B. (1999), "Carl W. Gottschalk", Biographical Memoirs of the National Academy of Sciences, 77: 122–141.
Cameron, J. Stewart (1999), "Carl Gottschalk – Physiologist, Bibliophile and Historian of Nephrology", American Journal of Nephrology, 19 (2): 235–242, doi:10.1159/000013457, PMID10213824, S2CID11037524.
Thurau, K. (1998), "In memoriam: Carl William Gottschalk, MD 1922–1997", American Journal of Kidney Diseases, 31: xlvi–xlvii, doi:10.1016/s0272-6386(14)70007-1.