Wednesday, March 15, 2017

Medicine’s Golden Age is Over

The age of discovery began in the 1700s, with groups of scientists tinkering with everything. By the 1800s, some of this tinkering became useful inventions. By the 1900s, these inventions became products.  The advance of medicine followed this general trend and the golden age of medicine was the 1900s.

 

The high point of this golden age was the invention of penicillin to treat infection and inflammation, prevent death and allow healing.  Big advances in medicine stopped after the 1950s, but treatments were improved.

 

Now we are left with penicillin and polio vaccine. Illnesses are treated, not cured.  Healthcare has taken on all the trappings of a scam.

 

Penicillin

 

Penicillin was discovered by Alexander Fleming in 1928. The process for producing effective penicillin was developed at Pfizer from 1941 to 1944. The use of penicillin allowed physicians to cure bacterial infections that had decimated populations with smallpox, infections and other deadly plagues. See below:


Alexander Fleming, by Kevin Lepton

 

Alexander Fleming revolutionized the field of bacteriology with his research. His discovery of penicillin profoundly changed medical practice and the treatment of surgical infections, marking the beginning of the antibiotic era. Not only did Alexander Fleming discover it by chance, but also he did not fully realize the significance of his discovery.

Alexander Fleming was born on a farm in Ayrshire, located in the wilds of Scotland, on August 6, 1881. At the age of 14, he moved to London to join his older brother Tom, where he took classes at the commercial section of a high school, and then found work as an employee for a shipping company.

In July 1901, he came into possession of a small inheritance, which allowed him to resume his studies. He received a scholarship from the medical school at St. Mary's Hospital Medical School, where he presented a thesis on microbial infections and ways to combat them. He graduated as a medical doctor and received a gold medal from the University of London, in 1908. As he wanted to become a surgeon, Alexander Fleming was awarded the title of Companion of the Royal College of Surgeons.

Fleming begins to work with his former teacher, Sir Almroth Wright, the head of the Laboratory of Bacteriology at St. Mary's Hospital. He begins the work on the treatment of bacterial infections, which at that time take their toll. He had a small research laboratory in the basement of St Mary's Hospital, which became thereafter the Wright-Fleming Institute.

Fleming's appointment as professor of bacteriology in 1928, attests to his contribution to all sectors of research on infectious diseases. On his return from vacation September 3, 1928, a miracle occurs. He observed the growth inhibition of staphylococcal colonies on a petri dish containing a culture of bacteria growing on a layer of agar, a green mold, resembling that of Roquefort cheese. "That's funny!" exclaimed Alexander Fleming.

He then observed that the green mold, which probably came from an adjacent laboratory, has literally destroyed the bacteria culture. He will find very quickly that this fungus is active in many bacteria. Fleming discovered a fungus, which he called "Penicillium notatum", which was to become the main component of Penicillin. He published his discovery in 1929, but the Medical Research Club remained skeptical about it. As Fleming was not a biochemist, he did not have the necessary expertise to produce and purify penicillin. 

His discovery becomes especially important twelve years later thanks to the work of Sir Howard Florey and his team at Oxford University, who succeed in extracting and purifying the penicillin. The therapeutic effects of penicillin and its safety for the human body were recognized on August 6, 1941. This is the date on which an article is published in the British medical journal The Lancet, entitled "Further observations on penicillin." 

In 1942, Fleming obtained amazing results in his first clinical trial, curing the infection of a teenager with sepsis. Penicillin became to be mass-produced during the Second World War and since then, it has contributed to saving the lives of millions of people. In 1945, Fleming was awarded the Nobel Prize for Medicine for his discovery.

Rumor Has It … in grade school Alexander Fleming was prone to coughs and colds. So his teacher nicknamed him "Phlegm Kadiddlehopper. True story.

http://www.sciography.com/alexander-fleming.htm

 

Comments

 

Penicillin was the “wonder drug” of the 20th century. Mold had been used in various forms for medical purposes for centuries. The invention of the microscope in 1590 led to the discovery of how bacteria reacted to penicillin.

 


Norb Leahy, Dunwoody GA Tea Party Leader

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