Oddi: the paradox of the man and the sphincter
I. M. Modlin and H. Ahlman
Department of Surgery, Yale University School of Medicine, New Haven, Conn.
Ruggero Oddi was born of a modest family in the small town of Perugia,
Italy, in 1866. While still a young medical student, he identified the
sphincter and in addition characterized its physiological properties. At
the early age of 29 years, he was appointed as the director of the
Physiological Institute at Genoa, but a dalliance with drugs and fiscal
improprieties resulted in his being relieved of this eminent position in
Italian Physiology. He subsequently sought employment as a physician in the
Belgian colonial medical service and briefly spent time in the Congo. The
deterioration of his physical status and his use of Vitaline, a homeopathic
preparation, led to the demise of his medical career. For reasons that are
unclear, he then traveled to Africa where he died in Tunisia. In the last
50 years, the use of sophisticated methodology has allowed delineation of
aspects of the neural and hormonal regulatory mechanisms of the sphincter.
Its exact role in disease has not been determined, although its
relationship to the putative entity of biliary dyskinesia has been
suggested. The paradox of both the sphincter and its original discoverer
remain to be resolved.