Emil Abderhalden (March 9 1877 - August 5 1950) was a Swiss biochemist and physiologist. He was born Oberuzwill in the St. Gallen Canton in Switzerland.
Emil Abderhalden studied medicne at the University of Basel and received his doctorate in 1902. He then studied in the laboratory of Emil Fischer and worked at the University of Berlin. In 1911 he moved to the University of Halle and taught physiology in the medical school.
During World War I, he established a children's hospital and organized the removal of malnourished children to Switzerland. Subsequently, he resumed his research into physiological chemistry and began to study metabolism and food chemistry.
After World War II Abderhalden returned to Switzerland and a position at the University of Zurich.
He is known for a blood test for pregnancy, a test for cystine in urine, and for explaining the Abderhalden-Kaufmann-Lignac syndrome, a recessive genetic condition. He did extensive work in the analysis of proteins, polypeptides, and enzymes.
Abderhalden died in Zurich at age 73.
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