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Continual Raving

Continual Raving

A History of Meningitis and the People Who Conquered It

9780190677312
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Description
Not all scientific discoveries are genius.Continual Raving tells the combined stories of how scientists across the 19th and 20th centuries defeated meningitis - not through flawless scientific research, but often through a series of serendipitous events, misplaced assumptions, and flawed conclusions. The result is a story of not just a vanquished disease, but how scientific accomplishment sometimes occurs where its least expected.Although symptoms of meningitis were recorded as early as Hippocrates and the ancient Greeks, our understanding of the diseases origins and mechanisms remained obscure for most of human history. That changed in 1892, when German physician Richard Pfeiffer observed and isolated bacteria ultimately shown to cause meningitis in children - and concluded that those bacteria cause influenza. Haemophilus influenzae, as thee meningitis-causing bacteria have been erroneously named ever since,continued their strange journey to discovery in the decades that followed. Continual Raving traces the diseases strange encounters with science, including::· Heinrich Quincke, the German internist who first used a needle to draw spinal fluid from between a patients back bones· Simon Flexners management of American meningitis epidemics using immune serum from a horse· American bacteriologist Margaret Pittmans discovery (during the Great Depression, no less) of a sugar overcoat that protects the bacteria from white blood cells· Pediatrician Ashley Weech, who gave the first antibiotic used in America (based on instructions written in German) to a young patient sick with meningitis· Microbiologist Hattie Alexander, who learned why these antibiotics sometimes fail in such patients· Four scientists, in two teams, as they vied to be the first to create the right vaccine to prevent meningitis in infantsIn each of these deeply human stories, variables of chance, circumstance, and incorrect assumptions intervene to shape not just the arc of the scientists lives, but the trajectory of how humans have come to understand one of our most pernicious diseases. Continual Raving is a mosaic tale of how science conquered meningitis - and a larger story of the sometimes winding road to discovery.
Product Details
OUP USA
87536
9780190677312
9780190677312

Data sheet

Publication date
2019
Issue number
1
Cover
hard cover
Pages count
264
Dimensions (mm)
156 x 235
Weight (g)
522
  • Preface; Chapter 1 Meningitis-what is it?; Chapter 2 The flu and Richard Pfeiffer; Chapter 3 On immunity; Chapter 4 Finding the capsule; Chapter 5 The most famous graph in microbiology; Chapter 6 Early treatment-immune serum from a horse; Chapter 7 Antibiotic treatment-much better than nothing; Chapter 8 Microbes and genetics; Chapter 9 When antibiotics fail; Chapter 10 Keeping DNA out, letting it in; Chapter 11 Hitch a sugar to a protein; Chapter 12 A scientist and a scientist walk into a bar; Epilogue Searching for Richard Pfeiffer; Glossary;
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