Einar Lundsgaard (12 February 1899 – 18 December 1968) was a Danish professor of physiology at the University of Copenhagen (1934–1967). He was among the first to demonstrate that muscles contractions drew their energy from dephosphorylization of creatine phosphate when glycolysis was inhibited using iodoacetate.
Lundsgaard was born in Copenhagen where his father was a physician who came from the Gundelach family of lawyers and civil servants. His mother came from the Salomon family. At school he played guitar as a hobby. In 1917 he completed school and entered medical studies. He completed studies in 1923 and worked at the institute of medical physiology under Valdemar Henriques. He received a doctorate in 1929. His major finding was on muscle contraction when glycolysis was blocked by mono-iodoacetate. He found that energy was drawn from the phosphate bond energy and he published the findings in 1930. Until then it was believed that glycolysis was the main source of energy. Creatine phosphate was independently identified in muscle by the Eggleton
He retired in 1967 and died from renal cancer the next year.