PENICILLIN:WHO INVENTED PENICILLIN HOW PENICILLIN WAS DEVELOPED WHO CREATED AND MADE PENICILLIN FLOREY FLEMING CHAIN
PENICILLIN:WHO INVENTED PENICILLIN HOW PENICILLIN WAS DEVELOPED WHO CREATED AND MADE PENICILLIN FLOREY FLEMING CHAIN
How A Cantaloupe in Peoria Led to a Fruitful Discovery.The Manufacture of Penicillin Had More Twists and Turns Than A Six Flags Roller Coaster
In March,1942, a 31 year old woman, Anne Miller,lay in a New Haven,CT hospital dying of blood poisoning subsequent to a miscarriage. Her temperature swung between 103 and 106 for weeks.Nothing was able to control the strepococcus that had infected her blood.Her doctor felt like he was running out of options when he recalled a conversation with another doctor who spoke of work on an almost unknown substance called penicillin.
That substance, a bacteria killer, seemed the woman's last chance.A round of phone calls resulted in getting some of the precious penicillin for the woman.Within one day, the woman who had high fever for weeks had none.
Eric Lax unfolds the amazing story of the discovery and development of penicillin in his book "The Mold in Dr. Florey's Coat". The publisher is Henry Holt and Company.
Penicillin easily qualifies as a wonder drug, having saved countless millions from a horrible fate. Steven Speilberg, in scouting for movie material would be hard pressed to find a more fascinating assortment of characters, action and human interest. Everything from an Einstein look alike Jewish refugee from the Nazis to a young woman saved at the last minute by the miracle drug to the search for ways to manufacture penicillin that led to a cantaloupe in Peoria, Illinois.
Alexander Fleming noted that something in a mold growing on a dish in his lab could kill bacteria but he wasn't able to isolate what that "something" was. He stopped working on the problem. Several people tried to isolate the antibacterial agent but penicillin languished until others came along and did the heavy lifting.
It would be left to a number of scientists including a refugee from the Nazis who resembled Einstein,named Ernst Chain , an Oxford scientist named Howard Florey and Norman Heatley to assemble the puzzle pieces and make penicillin a life saver.



