The Neue Notizen aus dem Gebiete der Natur- und Heilkunde ("new notices from the areas of nature and medicine"[1]) was a
German publication of scientific discoveries by edited in
Weimar by
Ludwig Friedrich von Froriep and his son,
Robert Froriep.[2] Its first edition comprised publications from the period between January and March 1837.[2]
It was a continuation of the former Notizen aus dem Gebiete der Natur- und Heilkunde, edited by Ludwig Friedrich von Froriep from 1821 until 1836.[3][4][2]
In 1845, it published an article entitled Weisses Blut (white
blood) by
Rudolf Virchow, where he described a patient with multiple colorless corpuscles in the blood, a condition he named leukämie, thereby crafting the term
leukemia, still used contemporaneously.[8][9]
^Ladines-Castro, W.; Barragán-Ibañez, G.; Luna-Pérez, M. A.; Santoyo-Sánchez, A.; Collazo-Jaloma, J.; Mendoza-García, E.; Ramos-Peñafiel, C. O. (2016-04-01).
"Morphology of leukaemias". Revista Médica del Hospital General de México. 79 (2): 107–113.
doi:10.1016/j.hgmx.2015.06.007.
ISSN0185-1063.