| Ehrlich, Paul (1854-1915) | ||
| German
bacteriologist and immunologist who produced the first cure for syphilis.
He developed the arsenic compounds, in particular Salvarsan, that were used
in the treatment of syphilis before the discovery of antibiotics. He shared
the 1908 Nobel Prize for Physiology or Medicine with
Ilya Mechnikov for
his work on immunity. Ehrlich founded chemotherapy - the use of a chemical substance to destroy disease organisms in the body. He was also one of the earliest workers on immunology, and through his studies on blood samples the discipline of haematology was recognized. Ehrlich was born in Strehlin, Silesia (now Strzelin, Poland). He studied at Breslau, Strasbourg, and Leipzig. In 1884 he became a professor in Berlin, but spent 1886-88 in Egypt, curing himself of tuberculosis contracted in the course of research. He set up a small private laboratory in Berlin 1889, in addition to his academic posts. Ehrlich teamed up with bacteriologists Emil von Behring and Shibasabur Kitasato to try to find a cure for diphtheria. Ehrlich had studied antigen-antibody reactions using toxic plant proteins on mice, and Behring and Ehrlich were able to produce antitoxins obtained from much larger mammals which had been immunized against the diphtheria organism. These antitoxins were concentrated and purified, and successfully used on children 1894. The search progressed for dyes that would stain only bacteria and not other cells, and from this research Ehrlich's staff continued synthesizing and testing chemical substances that could seek out and destroy the bacteria without harming the human body. Ehrlich termed these compounds 'magic bullets'. This was how the cure for syphilis was found. |
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