Ryukichi Inada


Ryukichi Inada was a Japanese physician, a prominent academic, and bacteriologist researcher. He was the discoverer of the Weil's disease pathogen. In addition to his life's work in early 20th-century Japanese medical education, he was a pioneer in Japanese clinical cardiology and oncology.

Early life

Inada was born in Nagoya and he graduated from Tokyo Imperial University in medicine before travelling abroad for medical studies in Germany.

Career

Returning to Japan from Europe, Inada became the initial professor of medicine in the faculty at Fukuoka Medical School, which is today the.
In 1914-1915, Inada discovered the spirochete of infectious jaundice. The initial specimen material which Dr. Inada isolated in 1914 has been preserved as a significant artifact in the history of medicine.
In 1915, Inaba he termed the pathogen as Paper about Japan infectious icterus.
The content of this paper was range over from discover of pathogen, and contagion sources, clinical medicine, pathology, diagnosis, to cure.
Professor Inada was the first in Japan to import an electrocardiograph; and along with medical school colleagues, he was amongst the first to use this device clinically in Japan.
He was a prominent Japanese oncologist as well, serving as Vice President of the Japanese Society of Oncological Research from 1919 until his death in 1950.

In 1920 he was installed as the professor of medicine in the medical school of Tokyo University.
In 1943, he was named the President of the Japanese Medical Association, and the President of the Japan Medical Treatment Corporation.
He was nominated for the Nobel prize with Dr. Kitasato Shibasaburō.

Honors

He was awarded the Order of Culture.
The Maidashi campus of Kyushu University has commemorated Dr. Inada's contributions to the institution by naming one of the campus streets as Inada dōri.

Gallery