Konstantin Nikolaevitch Tretiakoff (Russian: ?????????? ?????????? ?????????, December 26, 1892 – 1958) was a Russian neuropathologist.
He was born in Fergana, Uzbekistan, as a son of military physician, who was member of Pierre Bonvalot's first Pamir expedition.
He studied medicine in L'Assistance Publique des Hopitaux de Paris.
He received his doctorate in 1919.
In his thesis he described degeneration of the substantia nigra associated with paralysis agitans (Parkinson disease).
Tretiakof was first to link this anatomic structure with parkinsonism.
Between 1922 and 1926 Tretiakoff worked at the HospĂcio de Juquery, near the city of SĂŁo Paulo, Brazil.
In 1931 he was appointed Chairman at the new Department of Neuropathology at the Medical Institute in Saratov, USSR, where he spent the rest of his life.
In 1910, Fritz Heinrich Lewy discovered what became known as Lewy bodies, and compared them to earlier findings by Gonzalo RodrĂguez Lafora.
In 1913, Lafora described another case, and acknowledged Lewy as the discoverer, naming them cuerpos intracelulares de Lewy (Lewy bodies).
Author: Unknown Source: Lees AJ, Selikhova M, Andrade LA, Duyckaerts C. The black stuff and Konstantin Nikolaevich Tretiakoff. Mov Disord. 23, 6, 777-783. 2008. doi:10.1002/mds.21855PMID 18383531. License: PD-Russia-1996