Edwin Goldmann


Edwin Goldmann was a biomedical researcher and surgeon most famous for his contributions in first characterizing the blood–brain barrier.

Discovery of the blood–brain barrier

Goldmann's mentor, Paul Ehrlich, was studying staining in his bacteriological studies by injecting aniline dyes in several species of animal. While most of the anatomy stained equally well, the brain tissue exhibited less staining in many species. Goldmann discovered that when the dye was injected directly into the central nervous system instead of into the other organs, the brain would stain equally well as other organs — but the stain would not travel to the rest of the body.
This suggested the presence of a compartmentalization between the cerebrospinal fluid and the vasculature of the rest of the body. This barrier was first hypothesized by a Berlin physician, Max Lewandowsky, in 1900.
Edwin Goldmann died from liver cancer in Freiburg on 13 August 1913.