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'Marcello Malpighi' (
March 10,
1628 -
September 30,
1694) was an
Italian doctor, who gave his name to several physiological features. He was a pioneer in using a
microscope and he has also been described as a founder of
comparative physiology and microscopic
anatomy.
Malpighi was born in
Crevalcore (''Cavalcuore'' in old Italian),
Italy, raised on the farm his parents owned and entered the
University of Bologna at the age of 17. Malpighi began to study
Aristotelian philosophy. When his father, mother and paternal grandmother died, he had to abandon his studies for more than two years to settle family affairs. He returned to university after two years, and became a doctor of
medicine in
1653. He married 'Francesca Massari', younger sister of his anatomy professor, the next year. She died a year later.
Academic career
In 1656 Malpighi received a chair of medical practice in the university, three years after he had applied for it, and later the same year
University of Pisa created a chair of theoretical medicine for him. He stayed in
Pisa for three years and then returned to
Bologna. In
1661 he was called to
University of Messina where he stayed for four years.
Most of Malpighi's research results were published as articles in the journal of the
Royal Society of England. His first article appeared there in
1661 and was about anatomy of a
lung of a frog during which he had discovered
capillaries. In 1667
Henry Oldenburg invited Malpighi to correspond with the Royal Society regularly and he became a fellow the next year, the first such recognition given to an Italian.
Research

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Malpighi used the
microscope for studies on
skin,
kidney, and for the first interspecies comparison of the
liver. He greatly extended the science of
embryology. The use of microscopes enabled him to describe the development of the
chick in its
egg, and discovered that
insects (particularly, the
silk worm) do not use
lungs to breathe, but small holes in their skin called
tracheae. Later he falsely concluded that plants had similar tubules. However, he observed that when a ringlike portion of bark was removed on a trunk a swelling of the tissues would occur above the ring. He correctly interpreted this as growth stimulated by food coming down from the leaves, and becoming dammed up above the ring. He was the first to see capillaries and discovered the link between arteries and veins that had eluded
William Harvey.
Malpighi is regarded as the founder of microscopic anatomy and the first
histologist. Many microscopic anatomical structures are named after him, including a skin layer (
Malpighi layer) and two different
Malpighian corpuscles in the
kidneys and the
spleen, as well as the
Malpighian tubules in the excretory system of insects.
He also studied
chick embryo development with detailed drawings and discovered
taste buds of human tongue. Some of his studies he made by
vivisection. He also studied the anatomy of a
brain and concluded that this organ is a
gland. In terms of modern endocrinology this deduction is correct because neurotransmitter substances represent paracrine hormones, and the hypothalamus of the brain has long been recognized for its hormone-secreting capacity. He was also the first to discover and study human
fingerprints.
His treatise 'De polypo cordis' (
1666) was important towards understanding how blood clots and its composition. He may have been the first person to see red blood cells under a microscope. He described how the form of a blood clot differed in the right vs. the left sides of the heart.
Despite of his anatomical studies, he was also one of the rare contemporary scholars who studied
plants; he published his findings in a book ''Anatomia Plantarum'' in
1671. It was the most exhaustive study of botany at the time. Royal Society published it the next year.
After the dissection of a black male, Malpighi made some ground-breaking headway into the discovery of the origin of black skin. Malpighi found that the black pigment was caused because of a layer of mucus just beneath the skin
Years in Rome
1691
Pope Innocent XII invited him to
Rome as Papal physician, He taught medicine in the
Papal Medical School and wrote a long treatise about his studies he donated to Royal Society of London.
Marcello Malpighi died of
apoplexy in Rome on
September 30,
1694. Royal Society published his studies in 1696.
Some of Malpighi's important works
★ ''De viscerum structura exercitatio'' (Bologna, 1666)
References
★ Adelmann, Howard (1966) ''Marcello Malpighi and the Evolution of Embryology'' 5 vol., Cornell University Press, Ithaca, N.Y.
OCLC 306783
External links
★
Biography of Marcello Malpighi in the Encyclopaedia Britannica