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Looking Back in History
2025
:5;
29
doi:
10.25259/CSDM_7_2025

Josef Jadassohn – A pioneer in dermatology

Department of Dermatology,Venereology and Leprosy, Indira Gandhi Medical College and Research Institute, Puducherry, India.
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*Corresponding author: Dr. Saritha Mohanan, Department of Dermatology, Venereology and Leprosy, Indira Gandhi Medical College and Research Institute, Puducherry, India. saritha_mohanan@yahoo.co.in

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This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-Non Commercial-Share Alike 4.0 License, which allows others to remix, transform, and build upon the work non-commercially, as long as the author is credited and the new creations are licensed under the identical terms.

How to cite this article: Mohanan S. Josef Jadassohn – A pioneer in dermatology. CosmoDerma. 2025;5:29. doi: 10.25259/CSDM_7_2025

Josef Jadassohn (1863–1936) [Figure 1] had a great impact on the growth of dermatology. He is well known for having described various conditions, many of which bear his name, along with his assistants. Some of these conditions include nevus sebaceous of Jadassohn, JadassohnLewandowsky syndrome (pachyonychia congenita), Jadassohn-Dössekker disease (myxoedema tuberosum), and Naegeli-Franceschetti-Jadassohn syndrome.[1] He was the first to describe pityriasis lichenoides chronica, granulosis rubra nasi, incontinentia pigmenti, as well as the Borst-Jadassohn phenomenon. He is known as the father of the patch test.[2] Other eponymous conditions include Jadassohn-Tieche nevus (blue nevi) and Jadassohn-Pellizzari anetoderma.[3]

Josef Jadassohn. Reproduced with permission from Obituary.
Figure 1:
Josef Jadassohn. Reproduced with permission from Obituary.

Jadassohn was born into a Jewish family in Liegnitz, Silesia (now in Poland) on September 10, 1863.[1,2] He studied medicine in Göttingen, Heidelberg, Leipzig, and Breslau, obtaining his doctorate in 1888 at Breslau [Table 1]. He was offered a dermatology residency position at the University of Breslau by Albert Neisser. After residency, he joined the staff at the University of Breslau. In 1896, Jadassohn proposed a classification of skin diseases according to etiology.[4] He was particularly interested in tuberculosis and contributed an extensive chapter on cutaneous tuberculosis to the Handbook of Skin Diseases (Handbuch der Hautkrankheiten) edited by Franz Mracek of Vienna. In 1896, at age 33, he succeeded Edmund Lesser as director of the skin clinic of the University of Berne. In 1903, Jadassohn was promoted to the rank of professor, and in 1906, the skin clinic of Berne conducted the 9th Congress of the German Dermatological Society, which very much enhanced the prestige of the clinic. In 1917, after 21 years in Switzerland, Jadassohn moved to the University of Breslau where he succeeded his former teacher, Albert Neisser. This was the most prestigious chair of dermatology in the German Reich, and Jadassohn was given the title of “Geheimrat” (privy councilor), by which everyone called him.[4] This period is considered one of the turning points for Dermatology.[5] Jadassohn’s students included luminaries such as Bruno Bloch (1878–1933), Max Jessner (1887–1978), Marion Sulzberger(1895–1983), Stephen Epstein (1900–1973), Herman K.B.Pinkus (1905–1985) and Walter Freudenthal (1893–1952).[5] Together they did phenomenal work in describing various skin conditions and their many facets.

Table 1: Milestones in the life of Josef Jadassohn.
1963, September 10 Born in Liegnitz, Silesia
1888 Received his doctorate
1887 Assistant to Albert Neisser in the University of Breslau
1892 Finished residency and went on sponsored tour of Dermatology centers in Europe.
Appointed chief of the dermatologic division of the Allerheiligen Hospital in Breslau.
1896 Chair of dermatology at the University of Bern, Switzerland at age 33
1917 Called to Breslau to succeed Neisser
1930–1931 Retired from the University of Breslau
1934 Migrated to Zurich
1936, March 24 Death at Zurich

Jadassohn also occupied a series of editorial and administrative posts [Table 2]. He was an editorial board member of “Archiv für Dermatologie und Syphilis.” One of his valuable contributions to dermatology was the “Handbook of Skin and Venereal Diseases,”[3] published between 1927 and 1934 in 23 volumes and 41 different parts.[4] Jadassohn’s handbook was considered by far the most comprehensive textbook of dermatology ever published. Whenever he wrote or spoke, he endeavored to be as accurate and conservative as possible.[6] He was elected as an Honorary fellow of the Royal Society of Medicine in 1935.[7]

Table 2: Achievements of Josef Jadassohn.
Year Achievement
1892 Described “erythematous anetoderma of Jadassohn”
1894 Described pityriasis lichenoides chronica
1895 Described nevus sebaceous
1895 Described prototype of patch test
1896 Proposed a classification of skin diseases based on etiology
1900 Published a paper on drug reactions
1901 Described granulosis rubra nasi
1904 Published paper on “infectious and toxic hematogenic dermatoses”
1905 Published paper on “skin diseases caused by disorders of metabolism” and “toxicodermas”
1907 Published chapter on “tuberculosis” in handbook of skin diseases (Handbuch der Hautkrankheiten)
1906 Described incontinentia pigmenti, cutis verticis gyrate, blue nevi, and pachyonychia congenita, with students at the 9thcongress of German Dermatology Society
1913 Cofounder and the first vice president of the Swiss society of dermatology and venereology
1917 Assumed the editorship of the Archiv für Dermatologie und Syphilis
1921 Founded the Zentralblatt für Haut-und Geschlechtskrankheiten
Served as departmental editor of Dermatologische Wochenshrift and Klinische Wochenshrift.
1922 Chairman of the German society for the fight against venereal diseases
1928 Became chairman of the syphilis commission of the league of nations
1927–34 Editor-in-chief of handbook of skin and venereal diseases (Handbuch der Haut-und Geschlechtskrankheiten).

Jadassohn married Margrete Kern in the year 1896, and they had a son (Werner Jadassohn) in 1897, who later became chairman of the Department of Dermatology at the University of Geneva. After 7 years, they had a daughter (Hilde). The activities of the Nazi party caused him and his family distress, and they migrated to Zurich in 1934. Jadassohn was diagnosed with colon cancer in 1936, to which he succumbed the same year on March 24.[3,5]

Jadassohn, after the end of the war and the fall of the Nazis, was honored again as a pioneering dermatologist and as “the king of dermatology” in Germany and the world in the 1920s.

Ethical approval

The Institutional Review Board approval is not required.

Declaration of patient consent

Patient’s consent was not required, as there are no patients in this study.

Conflicts of interest

There are no conflicts of interest.

Use of artificial intelligence (AI)-assisted technology for manuscript preparation

The author confirms that there was no use of artificial intelligence (AI)-assisted technology for assisting in the writing or editing of the manuscript and no images were manipulated using AI.

Financial support and sponsorship: Nil.

References

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