| Fleming, Alexander | <person> This native of Scotland studied medicine at St. Mary's Hospital Medical School in London, where he won almost every prize and scholarship prize available. He graduated with honors in 1908 and 20 years later became Professor of Bacteriology at his alma mater. During World War I, he devoted his interest to problems of infection and developed an antiseptic proteolytic substance, lysozyme (muramidase). He managed a vaccine for acne, and developed a miniature technique for the Wassermann (syphilis) reaction. Although the Belgians, Gratin and Path, in 1925 reported a mould, Streptothrix, which inhibited the growth of staphylococcus, Alexander Fleming was the first to prove such in 1928. Fleming found the mould Penicillium notatum, listed the organisms sensitive to it, emphasised that it was not toxic to leukocytes, and used it on surface wounds 12 years before it became commercially available. Fleming's description of his discovery is interesting - "I opened a culture plate of staphylococci and something fell from the air onto the plate. Later I saw lysis of the staphylococci colony. Instead of casting out the contaminated culture with "appropriate language," I made some investigations. My lab was dingy and dim coloured. If this had been an American lab, this could never have been discovered." He shared the Nobel Prize for Medicine in 1945 with Florey and Chain, who extracted penicillin from the mould and commercially produced it. Lived: 1881-1955. (15 Nov 1997) |
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| Alexander Fleming | <person> This native of Scotland studied medicine at St. Mary's Hospital Medical School in London, where he won almost every prize and scholarship prize available. He graduated with honors in 1908 and 20 years later became Professor of Bacteriology at his alma mater. During World War I, he devoted his interest to problems of infection and developed an antiseptic proteolytic substance, lysozyme (muramidase). He managed a vaccine for acne, and developed a miniature technique for the Wassermann (syphilis) reaction. Although the Belgians, Gratin and Path, in 1925 reported a mould, Streptothrix, which inhibited the growth of staphylococcus, Alexander Fleming was the first to prove such in 1928. Fleming found the mould Penicillium notatum, listed the organisms sensitive to it, emphasised that it was not toxic to leukocytes, and used it on surface wounds 12 years before it became commercially available. Fleming's description of his discovery is interesting - "I opened a culture plate of staphylococci and something fell from the air onto the plate. Later I saw lysis of the staphylococci colony. Instead of casting out the contaminated culture with "appropriate language," I made some investigations. My lab was dingy and dim coloured. If this had been an American lab, this could never have been discovered." He shared the Nobel Prize for Medicine in 1945 with Florey and Chain, who extracted penicillin from the mould and commercially produced it. Lived: 1881-1955. (15 Nov 1997) |
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| Fleming |
British writer famous for writing spy novels about secret agent James Bond (1908-1964) English bacteriologist who discovered penicillin (1881-1955) a native of Flanders or a Flemish-speaking Belgian
Ãâó: wordnet.princeton.edu/perl/webwn
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| Fleming |
(Flem
Ãâó: www.mercksource.com/pp/us/cns/cns_hl_dorlands.jspz...
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| Fleming |
(1827-1915). Famous for several inventions and engineering successes, Sandford Fleming came as a young man to Canada in 1845. He lived in Peterborough for his first two years, and first met Catharine Parr Traill at that time. In later years he fondly remembered Traill and did what he could to raise funds to recognize her achievements in Canada and to help her overcome the financial losses that befell her. She called him her "valued friend."
Ãâó: www.collectionscanada.ca/moodie-traill/t1-300-e.ht...
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| Fleming |
(1881-1955) English scientist who, in 1928, observed that a mold called Penicillium killed germs. This discovery resulted in the development of antibiotics, which attack or weaken bacteria that cause many diseases. Antibiotics were not widely used until the 1940s.
Ãâó: regentsprep.org/Regents/global/vocab/topic_alpha.c...
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| Fleming | a native of Flanders or a Flemish-speaking Belgian |
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| Fleming | English bacteriologist who discovered penicillin (1881-1955) |
| Fleming | British writer famous for writing spy novels about secret agent James Bond (1908-1964) |
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