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In a pioneering effort to detect drugs capable of spe-cifically killing certain microbes, Ehrlich synthesized a series of specific antimicrobial drugs, the most famous example being arsphenamine (Salvarsan ® ), the first syn-thetic agent against syphilis [5] .
Oct 20, 2015 · Inspired by this atmosphere of great discoveries, Paul Ehrlich, born in Strehlen, German Kingdom of Prussia, near Breslau in 1854, became one of the most influential scientists of his time and a pioneer in the fields of hematology, immunology, chemotherapy, and pharmacology. 1-3 In his career, Ehrlich connected cellular and molecular theories ...
- Bernd Groner, Hans-Peter Horny, Fritz Sörgel, Udo Schumacher, Peter Valent
- 2015
e other hand was Ehrlich, obsessed with chemistry, who built his views on the ‘lock-and-key’ principle. He devel-oped immunological ideas around constant structures and postulat.
- Stefan H E Kaufmann
- 2008
1. Paul Ehrlich and his Receptor Concept. This chapter focuses on the Berlin bacteriologist and immunologist Paul Ehrlich (1854–1915). It deals with the emergence of his receptor concept between 1878 and approximately 1905, by which time the concept was largely developed.
- Cay-Rüdiger Prüll, Andreas-Holger Maehle, Robert Francis Halliwell
- 2009
In awarding the Paul Ehrlich and Ludwig Darmstaedter Prize, the Foundation wishes to encourage scientists all over the world to do what Paul Ehrlich did throughout his entire life: extend medical know-how and make a contribution to the constant struggle against illness and disease-induced mortality.
The Jewish-German histologist, microbiologist, bio-chemist, immunologist and pharmacologist Paul Ehrlich, by his research founded chemotherapy and pioneered im-munology, haematology and oncology. For his contribu- Ehrlich first years. Paul Ehrlich was born on 14 March 1854 in the little town of Strehlen, not far from Breslau.
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Sep 1, 2004 · The very concept of chemotherapy, and his classification of cancer cells as 'feindliche Brüder' (hostile brothers), would suggest that Ehrlich's contributions to experimental cancer research...