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Henderson, Lawrence J(oseph)

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Henderson, Lawrence J(oseph) (1878-1942)

US biochemist and physiologist. His quantitative measurements of bodily buffer systems (1907-10) were expanded logarithmically by Danish biochemist K A Hasselbach to produce the Henderson-Hasselbach equation describing acid-base equilibria. Further investigations of oxygen-carbon dioxide exchanges in blood led to his seminal book, Blood: A Study in General Physiology (1928). A philosopher and scholar with varied interests, Henderson related Vilfredo Pareto's classic writings on sociology to his own homeostatic approach to the buffering capability of the blood; his lectures on Pareto influenced numerous young sociologists.

Henderson was born in Lynn, Massachusetts. He spent his career as a research physician at Harvard University (1904-42). He founded the department of physical chemistry at Harvard (1920) and established Harvard's Fatigue Laboratory (1927) to study chemical changes due to environmentally-induced stress.


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