CH391L/S13/Phage Therapy: Difference between revisions
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==History== | ==History== | ||
The discovery of | The discovery of a heat-labile, bacteria-killing substance that could pass through extremely small filters was discovered several times: | ||
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| 1915|| d'Herelle, French-Canadian, ''Shigella''. Coined the term "bacteriophage". | | 1915|| d'Herelle, French-Canadian, ''Shigella''. Coined the term "bacteriophage". | ||
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The first therapeutic usage of phage was in 1919, to treat a child with severe dysentery. In a classic case of old-school science, the lead researchers (which included d'Herelle) drank portions of the bacteriophage preparation the day before treating the child, to check the treatment's safety in humans. The child fully recovered within a few days, and further tests confirmed the result. | |||
In the 1930s and 1940s, bacteriophage preparations were developed and sold by L'Oréal and the Eli Lilly Company. The development and mass production of antibiotics in the late 1940s halted research into phage therapy in the West, due to the superior efficacy and simplicity of antibiotics. | |||
==Current Applications== | ==Current Applications== |
Revision as of 14:26, 23 March 2013
Introduction to Phage Therapy
History
The discovery of a heat-labile, bacteria-killing substance that could pass through extremely small filters was discovered several times:
Year | Event |
---|---|
1896 | Hankin, British bacteriologist working on Vibrio cholerae |
1898 | Gamaleya, Russian, Bacillus subtilis |
1915 | Twort, British, Staphylococcus |
1915 | d'Herelle, French-Canadian, Shigella. Coined the term "bacteriophage". |
The first therapeutic usage of phage was in 1919, to treat a child with severe dysentery. In a classic case of old-school science, the lead researchers (which included d'Herelle) drank portions of the bacteriophage preparation the day before treating the child, to check the treatment's safety in humans. The child fully recovered within a few days, and further tests confirmed the result.
In the 1930s and 1940s, bacteriophage preparations were developed and sold by L'Oréal and the Eli Lilly Company. The development and mass production of antibiotics in the late 1940s halted research into phage therapy in the West, due to the superior efficacy and simplicity of antibiotics.