Wednesday, February 22, 2012

Flory was an american company products for...

Antibiotics transformed medicine. Opening antibiotics



started accidentally. The morning of September 3, 1928,


was clear from his cluttered laboratory. Fleming was



sort through a number of glass plates that were previously covered by bacteria


Staphyloccus as part of research Fleming was doing. One of the plates


was a form on it. The form was in the form of rings and rings around the region >> << seemed to be free from Staphyloccus bacteria. The form was Penicillium


notatum. Fleming was a life long interest in ways to kill bacteria and it


conclusion that bacteria on the plate around the ring have been killed by >> << some substances that come from the mold. Sir Alexander Fleming Further investigation showed that the form can kill


other bacteria and that it can be given to small animals without any >> << side effects. However, during the year, Fleming moved to other health issues >> << and it was ten years later, Howard Flory and Ernst Cheney, working on


bacteria in pregnancy

University of Oxford, selected bacteria killing substance found to form - >> << penicillin. In 1941, Dr. Charles Fletcher, the hospital


Oxford heard their work. He had a patient who was close to death as a result


bacteria entering the wound. Fletcher used some of the chain and penicillin


Flora for the patient and the wound made stunning recovery. Unfortunately, Fletcher is not enough penicillin to fully rid the patient's body


bacteria, and he died a few weeks as the bacteria have taken hold. However, penicillin has shown that he can do that has been lost. The only reason the patient did not survive because they do not have enough


drug - not that it does not work. Flory was an American company products for mass production is


and it was enough for the treatment of bacterial infections


broke in the Army. Penicillin got nicknamed wonder drugs


and strattera in 1945 Fleming, Flory and chain were awarded the Nobel Prize in medicine. After 1945 was the era of antibiotics. .


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