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1.
Immunol Rev ; 2024 Sep 14.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39276357

RESUMEN

At the end of the 19th century medicine was turned upside down by the development of serum therapy, a great therapeutic revolution as was vaccination a few years earlier. Many serums were developed, the most famous being the German doctor Emil von Behring's diphtheria serum, which saved countless children's lives from this dreadful disease. The discovery of the serum therapy principle, allowed by the progressive understanding of humoral immunity, occurred both in Germany and France, almost at the same time. Interestingly, this principle arose from two different intellectual paths, reviving the age-old opposition between mechanism and vitalism: while Behring came to this discovery reasoning as a chemist, French researchers Charles Richet and Jules Héricourt behaved as physiologists, focusing on the role of the host in the host-pathogen interaction. However, we should maybe consider that serum therapy history begins much earlier. Great forerunners must not be forgotten, especially researchers who investigated the field of immunity as soon as in the very beginning of the microbiological revolution; but also many people throughout centuries who tried to cure diseases with blood: as a transfer of blood serum, serum therapy also lies in the tradition of blood transfusion.

2.
Sci Total Environ ; 904: 166817, 2023 Dec 15.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37673248

RESUMEN

Sugarcane is a vital commodity crop often grown in (sub)tropical regions which have been experiencing a recent deterioration in air quality. Unlike for other commodity crops, the risk of air pollution, specifically ozone (O3), to this C4 crop has not yet been quantified. Yet, recent work has highlighted both the potential risks of O3 to C4 bioenergy crops, and the emergence of O3 exposure across the tropics as a vital factor determining global food security. Given the large extent, and planned expansion of sugarcane production in places like Brazil to meet global demand for biofuels, there is a pressing need to characterize the risk of O3 to the industry. In this study, we sought to a) derive sugarcane O3 dose-response functions across a range of realistic O3 exposure and b) model the implications of this across a globally important production area. We found a significant impact of O3 on biomass allocation (especially to leaves) and production across a range of sugarcane genotypes, including two commercially relevant varieties (e.g. CTC4, Q240). Using these data, we calculated dose-response functions for sugarcane and combined them with hourly O3 exposure across south-central Brazil derived from the UK Earth System Model (UKESM1) to simulate the current regional impact of O3 on sugarcane production using a dynamic global vegetation model (JULES vn 5.6). We found that between 5.6 % and 18.3 % of total crop productivity is likely lost across the region due to the direct impacts of current O3 exposure. However, impacts depended critically on the substantial differences in O3 susceptibility observed among sugarcane genotypes and how these were implemented in the model. Our work highlights not only the urgent need to fully elucidate the impacts of O3 in this important bioenergetic crop, but the potential implications air quality may have upon tropical food production more generally.


Asunto(s)
Contaminantes Atmosféricos , Contaminación del Aire , Ozono , Saccharum , Ozono/análisis , Grano Comestible/química , Productos Agrícolas , Contaminantes Atmosféricos/análisis
3.
J Med Biogr ; : 9677720221100211, 2022 May 18.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35585692

RESUMEN

The significance of Social Medicine in France in 1848 as a movement led by doctor Jules Guérin is not adequately documented. Why would an orthopedist write the call to doctors in Paris proposing a union around Social Medicine? What is the meaning of the formulation on Social Medicine made by Jules Guérin in 1848? An analysis of Jules Guérin's trajectory supported by primary and bibliographic sources was made to answer these questions. The material analyzed allows us to conclude that there was no movement around Social Medicine, unlike hygiene, and closer to the revolutionary proposals of 1848. Jules Guérin was a liberal doctor who aimed to have a place in the new revolutionary government for the medical corporation. His scientific and professional work was fundamentally related to orthopedics, and the paper on Social Medicine was a circumstantial essay with liberal content.

4.
J Geophys Res Biogeosci ; 127(12): e2022JG007041, 2022 Dec.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37034424

RESUMEN

Stable carbon isotopes in plants can help evaluate and improve the representation of carbon and water cycles in land-surface models, increasing confidence in projections of vegetation response to climate change. Here, we evaluated the predictive skills of the Joint UK Land Environmental Simulator (JULES) to capture spatio-temporal variations in carbon isotope discrimination (Δ13C) reconstructed by tree rings at 12 sites in the United Kingdom over the period 1979-2016. Modeled and measured Δ13C time series were compared at each site and their relationships with local climate investigated. Modeled Δ13C time series were significantly correlated (p < 0.05) with tree-ring Δ13C at eight sites, but JULES underestimated mean Δ13C values at all sites, by up to 2.6‰. Differences in mean Δ13C may result from post-photosynthetic isotopic fractionations that were not considered in JULES. Inter-annual variability in Δ13C was also underestimated by JULES at all sites. While modeled Δ13C typically increased over time across the UK, tree-ring Δ13C values increased only at five sites located in the northern regions but decreased at the southern-most sites. Considering all sites together, JULES captured the overall influence of environmental drivers on Δ13C but failed to capture the direction of change in Δ13C caused by air temperature, atmospheric CO2 and vapor pressure deficit at some sites. Results indicate that the representation of carbon-water coupling in JULES could be improved to reproduce both the trend and magnitude of interannual variability in isotopic records, the influence of local climate on Δ13C, and to reduce uncertainties in predicting vegetation-environment interactions.

5.
Glob Chang Biol ; 28(2): 524-541, 2022 01.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34626040

RESUMEN

Carbon isotope discrimination (Δ13 C) in C3 woody plants is a key variable for the study of photosynthesis. Yet how Δ13 C varies at decadal scales, and across regions, and how it is related to gross primary production (GPP), are still incompletely understood. Here we address these questions by implementing a new Δ13 C modelling capability in the land-surface model JULES incorporating both photorespiratory and mesophyll-conductance fractionations. We test the ability of four leaf-internal CO2 concentration models embedded in JULES to reproduce leaf and tree-ring (TR) carbon isotopic data. We show that all the tested models tend to overestimate average Δ13 C values, and to underestimate interannual variability in Δ13 C. This is likely because they ignore the effects of soil water stress on stomatal behavior. Variations in post-photosynthetic isotopic fractionations across species, sites and years, may also partly explain the discrepancies between predicted and TR-derived Δ13 C values. Nonetheless, the "least-cost" (Prentice) model shows the lowest biases with the isotopic measurements, and lead to improved predictions of canopy-level carbon and water fluxes. Overall, modelled Δ13 C trends vary strongly between regions during the recent (1979-2016) historical period but stay nearly constant when averaged over the globe. Photorespiratory and mesophyll effects modulate the simulated global Δ13 C trend by 0.0015 ± 0.005‰ and -0.0006 ± 0.001‰ ppm-1 , respectively. These predictions contrast with previous findings based on atmospheric carbon isotope measurements. Predicted Δ13 C and GPP tend to be negatively correlated in wet-humid and cold regions, and in tropical African forests, but positively related elsewhere. The negative correlation between Δ13 C and GPP is partly due to the strong dominant influences of temperature on GPP and vapor pressure deficit on Δ13 C in those forests. Our results demonstrate that the combined analysis of Δ13 C and GPP can help understand the drivers of photosynthesis changes in different climatic regions.


Asunto(s)
Ecosistema , Plantas , Ciclo del Carbono , Dióxido de Carbono , Isótopos de Carbono , Fotosíntesis , Hojas de la Planta
6.
PhytoKeys ; 182: 93-106, 2021.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34690509

RESUMEN

The lectotypification of six names of species, originally described as Evelyna Lind. (Orchidaceae), based on collections of Jean Jules Linden from locations that are currently in Venezuela and Colombia, is proposed. We also provide the number and location of duplicates of the type material.

7.
J Hist Neurosci ; 30(3): 277-299, 2021.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33529088

RESUMEN

Jules Baillarger was one of the foremost figures of nineteenth-century neurobiology. He is remembered today for his discovery that the human cerebral cortex is composed of six intercalated layers. Even today, two horizontal fiber bundles within cortical layers IV and V are referred to as the outer and inner bands of Baillarger. It is a measure of the importance of Baillarger's discovery that his findings were elaborated upon with advances in microscopy and the development of methods for staining neurons and myelin by, notably, Theodor Meynert and Santiago Ramon y Cajal. Furthermore, Baillarger's observation that there are variations in the thickness of one or another of the six cortical layers in different cortical regions, and the discovery of giant pyramidal motor neurons in layer V of the precentral gyrus, ultimately led to the cytoarchitectonic and myeloarchitectonic maps of Oscar Vogt and Cécile Vogt-Mugnier, and of their student Korbinian Brodmann (1908). Less well known are Baillarger's contributions to the semiology of aphasia and the pivotal role he played in the recognition of the localization and lateralization of speech to the left hemisphere. Paul Broca's localization of articulate language to the posterior aspect of the frontal lobes and Marc Dax's discovery that speech is a function of the left hemisphere were vigorously challenged within French academic medicine until 1865, when Baillarger gave two addresses to the Royal Academy of Medicine. In the first address, he described a form of aphasia he called the perversion of language, which we now call fluent aphasia, and reported that aphasic patients can express words or parts of sentences when they are angry or excited, a phenomenon now known as the Baillarger-Jackson principle. In his second address, Baillarger supported the lateralization of speech to the left hemisphere of the brain and referred to this association as Dax's "singular law," and supported the localization of speech to the posterior aspect of the left inferior frontal gyrus. Baillarger's description of the perversion of language and of the influence of emotions on speech presaged the discipline of aphasiology, and his support for the lateralization of speech to the left hemisphere marks the first instance of the unequivocal recognition of asymmetrical hemispheric functions by academic medicine. This article reviews these aspects of Baillargher's career. Critical sections of his papers on cortical structure, aphasia, and functional hemispheric asymmetry are translated by the author.


Asunto(s)
Lenguaje , Habla , Afasia de Broca , Encéfalo , Lóbulo Frontal , Humanos , Masculino
8.
Eur Neurol ; 83(3): 345-350, 2020.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32690851

RESUMEN

In no country has the duel prevailed to such a great extent as in France where the matter of dueling and affairs of honor were of frequent occurrence until the 20th century. The term duel has since been established for any contest between 2 persons or parties, be they sporting, intellectual, political, or in other matters. Despite their worldwide recognition and great scientific production, Pierre Marie and Jules Dejerine became rivals at the end of the 19th century. While Marie defended Charcot's neurological school at Salpêtrière Hospital, Dejerine had his own neurology school to contend. The fierce antagonism between them materialized to the verge of a real death duel in 1892 and later to an intellectual duel in the famous debate about aphasias, held in Paris in 1908.


Asunto(s)
Neurología/historia , Francia , Historia del Siglo XIX , Historia del Siglo XX , Humanos
9.
Neurosurg Focus ; 47(3): E3, 2019 09 01.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31473676

RESUMEN

The localization of articulate language (speech) to the posterior third of the third left frontal convolution-Broca's area-did not occur to Broca as he reported the case of his first aphasic patient in 1861. Initially Broca localized articulate language to both frontal lobes, a position that he maintained for 4 years after publishing his first case. In the interval, the Academy of Medicine in Paris had received a copy of a paper authored in 1836 by Marc Dax, in which Dax claimed that the ability to speak resides within the left hemisphere alone. The Academy of Medicine convened in the spring of 1865 to adjudicate the issue. All of the distinguished speakers argued against Dax's contention by citing the prevailing paradigm, that bilaterally symmetrical organs, such as the eyes and ears, and the hemispheres of the brain, must perform the same function. The lone dissenting voice was that of Jules Baillarger, the discoverer of the laminar organization of the cerebral cortex, whose argument in favor of what he called "Dax's law" was so lucid that it carried the day. During his address to the Academy, Baillarger not only supported left-hemisphere dominance for speech, but for the first time described two forms of aphasia, fluent and nonfluent, now referred to as Wernicke's and Broca's aphasias, respectively, as well as the ability of aphasics to speak during emotional outbursts, to which we now refer as Baillarger-Jackson aphasia. It was 9 days after Baillarger's address that Broca, for the first time, unequivocally localized speech to the left frontal lobe.This paper is based on the author's reading of Dax's and Broca's original texts and of the texts read before the Academy of Medicine meeting held at the National Library of France between April 4, 1865, and June 13, 1865. From these primary sources it is concluded that the Academy of Medicine's debate was the last serious challenge to left-hemisphere dominance for speech and to the localization of articulate language to the left frontal lobe-and that Jules Baillarger played a pivotal role in what was a defining moment in neurobiology.


Asunto(s)
Academias e Institutos/historia , Afasia de Broca/historia , Área de Broca , Lenguaje/historia , Área de Broca/anatomía & histología , Área de Broca/fisiología , Francia , Historia del Siglo XVIII , Historia del Siglo XIX , Humanos , Masculino , Paris
10.
Rev. chil. infectol ; 36(3): 353-357, jun. 2019. graf
Artículo en Español | LILACS | ID: biblio-1013793

RESUMEN

Resumen Con seguridad Thomas Mann es hoy en día un escritor olvidado, para los infectólogos y para todo el mundo, con apenas un selecto grupo de poquísimos lectores entre nuestros jóvenes colegas. No les hará mal, a éstos y a aquéllos, sin embargo, adquirir algún conocimiento de las ideas sobre las enfermedades infecciosas en la primera mitad del siglo XX, período en que Mann escribió las obras aquí comentadas: por el contrario puede resultarles particularmente útil si este conocimiento les llega a través de la visión muy personal del germano, quien pone el foco más en el espíritu -la voluntad, el alma en suma- que en el componente físico de la enfermedad, en la miseria corporal, ignorando de paso, desdeñosamente, a las bacterias causantes.


Surely Thomas Mann is today a forgotten writer, with only a little and selected group of readers between our young colleagues. However, perhaps could be useful for the others some knowledge about his vision of the infectious diseases in the first half of the twentieth century, when he wrote the novels here reviewed. Typhoid fever, meningitis, syphilis, tuberculosis and cholera are present in Mann's thematic from Buddenbrooks till Doktor Faustus, always with a personal focus, more on spirit -the will to live- rather than flesh and bones... or bacteria. One of his lasts and minor works let us throw an ironical glance over transplant, no so named, indeed, by Mann, who speaks of "exchange". In this second part we present tuberculosis, cholera and…transplant.


Asunto(s)
Historia del Siglo XX , Tuberculosis/historia , Cólera/historia , Trasplantes/historia , Medicina en la Literatura/historia
11.
J Hist Neurosci ; 28(2): 176-194, 2019.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31141674

RESUMEN

Duchenne de Boulogne was one of the founders of clinical neurology. His name has been eponymically linked to the most common form of muscular dystrophy, originally described by him as pseudo-hypertrophic muscular paralysis or myo-sclerotic paralysis. Obtaining muscle biopsy specimens was essential to gain insight about the etiopathogenensis of the disease. Duchenne invented a novel instrument: l'emporte-pièce histologique, also known as "Duchenne's trocar," to perform muscle biopsies. Following Duchenne's design and instructions, a Parisian company, Charrière, constructed the first instrument probably in 1864. That instrument was essential for Duchenne's description of the histopathological abnormalities typical of pseudo-hypertrophic muscular paralysis. The innovative needle-biopsy technique enabled physicians to analyze the spectrum of pathological changes at varying stages of different neuromuscular diseases. Duchenne's trocar was a forerunner of several types of modern muscle-biopsy needles. His invention was instrumental in the development of the disciplines of muscle pathology and clinical myology.


Asunto(s)
Biopsia/historia , Biopsia/instrumentación , Biopsia/métodos , Técnicas Histológicas/historia , Técnicas Histológicas/instrumentación , Técnicas Histológicas/métodos , Enfermedades Neuromusculares/historia , Enfermedades Neuromusculares/terapia , Instrumentos Quirúrgicos/historia , Femenino , Francia , Alemania , Historia del Siglo XIX , Humanos , Masculino , Neurólogos/historia , Médicos/historia
12.
Hist Psychiatry ; 30(3): 359-374, 2019 Sep.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30791755

RESUMEN

In the mesmeric movement, one of the phenomena cited to defend the existence of magnetic and nervous forces was the visual perception of them in the form of luminous emanations from people, or effluvia. This Classic Text is an 1892 article by French neurologist, Jules Bernard Luys (1828-97), about the observation of such effluvia by hypnotized individuals. Interestingly, the luminous phenomena perceived from mentally diseased individuals and from healthy ones had particular properties. Luys's interest in this and other unorthodox phenomena were consistent with ideas of animal magnetism in the late neo-mesmeric movement, as well as with some physicalistic conceptions of hypnosis and the nervous system held at the time.


Asunto(s)
Hipnosis/historia , Fenómenos Magnéticos , Animales , Francia , Historia del Siglo XIX , Humanos , Neurología/historia
13.
Sci Total Environ ; 660: 1245-1255, 2019 Apr 10.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30743919

RESUMEN

Droughts are among the costliest natural disasters. They affect wide regions and large numbers of people worldwide by tampering with water availability and agricultural production. In this research, soil moisture drought trends are assessed for Europe using the Soil Moisture Index (SMI) estimated on Joint UK Land Environment Simulator simulations under two Representative Concentration Pathways, the RCP 2.6 and RCP 6.0 scenarios. Results show that SMI drought conditions are expected to exacerbate in Europe with substantial differences among regions. Eastern Europe and Mediterranean regions are found to be the most affected. Spatially and temporally contiguous regions that exhibit SMI of Severe and Extreme index categories are identified as distinct drought events and are assessed for their characteristics. It is shown that even under strong emissions mitigation, these events are expected to increase in occurrence (22% to 123%), while their characteristics will become more unfavorable. Results indicate increase in their spatial extend (between 23% and 46%) and their duration (between 16% and 48%) depending on the period and the scenario. Additional analysis was performed for the exceptionally wide-area (over 106 km2) severe and extreme soil moisture drought events that are expected to drastically increase comparing to the recent past. Projections show that those events are expected to happen between 11 and 28 times more frequently depending on the scenario and the period with a 59% to 246% larger duration. These findings indicate that even applying strong mitigation measures, agricultural drought risk in Europe is expected to become higher than our present experience.

14.
J Anesth Hist ; 4(2): 115-122, 2018 Apr.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29960674

RESUMEN

Extravagant claims were made for proprietary dental anesthetics in Boston, MA, in the late 1800s. For instance, in 1883, Urial K. Mayo introduced an inhaled Vegetable Anaesthetic comprised of nitrous oxide that had been uselessly pretreated with botanical material. This misguided concept may have been inspired by homeopathy, but it was also in line with the earlier false belief of Elton R. Smilie, Charles T. Jackson, and William T.G. Morton that sulfuric ether could volatilize opium at room temperature. In 1895, the Dental Methyl Company advertised an agent they called Methyl, a supposedly perfect topical anesthetic for painless dental extraction. The active ingredient was probably chloroform. Anesthetic humbug did not cease in Boston on Ether Day of October 16, 1846.


Asunto(s)
Anestesia Dental/historia , Anestesia por Inhalación/historia , Cloroformo/historia , Odontólogos/historia , Éter/historia , Anestesia Dental/métodos , Anestesia por Inhalación/métodos , Anestesiología/historia , Boston , Cloroformo/administración & dosificación , Éter/administración & dosificación , Historia del Siglo XIX , Humanos
15.
Eur Neurol ; 79(3-4): 135-149, 2018.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29514153

RESUMEN

Victor Burq (1822-1884) is closely associated with a therapy named "burquism" by Jean-Martin Charcot, which was used in treating hysteria, especially hysteric anesthesia and paralysis, by applying metals, mainly copper, to affected zones. In 1876, Charcot, Luys, and Dumontpallier, commissioned by the Société de Biologie, issued 2 opinions validating the results obtained by Burq during the 25 years he dedicated to his research. From that point forward, the careers of these 3 famous physicians were lastingly reoriented toward the practice of hypnosis. This neo-mesmeric resurgence at the end of the nineteenth century can be considered the cause of an epistemological change that gave rise to "psychological medicine." During the repeated cholera epidemics in the mid-nineteenth century, Burq recommended preventive and corrective ingestion of copper, after observing that smelter workers were unaffected by the disease. The mechanisms of copper's anti-bacterial action have since been elucidated and legitimize Burq's anti-cholera campaign. Burq also advocated the ingestion of copper sulphate to treat diabetes. Current-day findings on intestinal microbiota and how these organisms influence blood sugar regulation support Burq's claims, considered far-fetched for many years.


Asunto(s)
Neurología/historia , Francia , Historia del Siglo XIX , Humanos , Histeria/historia , Médicos/historia
16.
MAbs ; 9(5): 774-780, 2017 07.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28557665

RESUMEN

The history of antimicrobial humoral immunity usually focuses on the works of the German school at the end of the 19th century, born in the tradition of chemistry and disinfection. Starting from an old quarrel of priority about serotherapy between Emil von Behring (1854-1917) and the French physiologists Charles Richet (1850-1935) and Jules Héricourt (1850-1938), we first confirm that the latter stated the principle of serotherapy in 1888 and put it into practice before the seminal Behring's article in 1890, observing several adverse effects of this new immunotherapy. We also find that researchers who can be considered heirs of the French school of Physiology founded by Claude Bernard (1813-1878) also investigated the field of humoral immunity in the 1870-1880s. Maurice Raynaud (1834-1881), Auguste Chauveau (1827-1917), and eventually Charles Richet applied the experimental method of Claude Bernard to the young field of microbiology, illustrating a movement called by Jacques Léonard "physiologization of the pasteurism." However, the contribution of physiologists in this field started before Louis Pasteur, leading to the conclusion that physiologists and chemists synergistically contributed to the birth of bacteriology and immunology.


Asunto(s)
Alergia e Inmunología/historia , Inmunidad Humoral , Inmunización Pasiva/historia , Animales , Historia del Siglo XIX , Humanos
17.
Rev Neurol (Paris) ; 173(6): 364-373, 2017 Jun.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28377088

RESUMEN

The trauma of World War I had a lasting impact on clinician and physiologist Jules Tinel (1879-1952). His treatment of peripheral nervous system injuries led him, in 1917, to describe the eponymous sign that he linked to activity of the sympathetic nervous system. Among the sequelae of nerve injuries, he was confronted with causalgia that he attributed, here again, to the autonomic nervous system, the main focus of his laboratory research throughout his career. Tinel's sign became so well known that it eclipsed the originality of his seminal descriptions of exertional headache and of hypertensive emergency caused by pheochromocytoma, which could also have been associated with his name. He was always able to marry his clinical practice of neurology and psychiatric consultations with his anatomicopathological, physiological and pathophysiological research, which was based on his daily practice as a physician. At the same time, he directed the work of numerous assistants in his research laboratory, which has since been unjustly forgotten. Several hundreds of scientific publications, including three seminal works, bear witness to his intense activity, which he combined with a genuine talent for teaching and making his findings accessible to a wider public. Those publications alone would fully justify the historical value of extending his renown beyond the existing eponym.


Asunto(s)
Neurología/historia , Médicos , Percepción Auditiva/fisiología , Francia , Historia del Siglo XIX , Historia del Siglo XX , Humanos , Enfermedades del Sistema Nervioso/diagnóstico , Enfermedades del Sistema Nervioso/historia , Enfermedades del Sistema Nervioso/terapia , Paris , Médicos/historia , Radiculopatía/diagnóstico , Radiculopatía/fisiopatología , Radiculopatía/psicología , Tabes Dorsal/diagnóstico , Tabes Dorsal/fisiopatología , Tabes Dorsal/psicología , Vibración , Primera Guerra Mundial
18.
J Hist Biol ; 50(1): 5-52, 2017 02.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26732271

RESUMEN

This article shows how Lamarckism was essential in the birth of the French school of molecular biology. We argue that the concept of inheritance of acquired characters positively shaped debates surrounding bacteriophagy and lysogeny in the Pasteurian tradition during the interwar period. During this period the typical Lamarckian account of heredity treated it as the continuation of protoplasmic physiology in daughter cells. Félix d'Hérelle applied this conception to argue that there was only one species of bacteriophage and Jules Bordet applied it to develop an account of bacteriophagy as a transmissible form of autolysis and to analyze the new phenomenon of lysogeny. In a long-standing controversy with Bordet, Eugène Wollman deployed a more morphological understanding of the inheritance of acquired characters, yielding a particulate, but still Lamarckian, account of lysogeny. We then turn to André Lwoff who, with several colleagues, completed Wollman's research program from 1949 to 1953. We examine how he gradually set aside the Lamarckian background, finally removing inheritance of acquired characters from the resulting account of bacteriophagy and lysogeny. In the conclusion, we emphasize the complex dual role of Lamarckism as it moved from an assumed explanatory framework to a challenge that the nascent molecular biology had to overcome.


Asunto(s)
Herencia , Lisogenia , Biología Molecular/historia , Bacteriófagos/fisiología , Francia , Historia del Siglo XX
19.
J Perioper Pract ; 26(11): 255-256, 2016 Nov.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29328774

RESUMEN

Although there had been rare reports in the past of a surgeon removing a prolapsed spleen dangling out of a traumatically lacerated abdomen, with recovery of the patient, a successful deliberate laparotomy for a pathologically enlarged spleen was, as you may imagine, a much more recent event, with all the advantages of antiseptic surgery and anaesthesia. In fact, the first such operation was actually performed with the mistaken diagnosis of a large ovarian mass.


Asunto(s)
Laparotomía/métodos , Bazo/patología , Esplenectomía/métodos , Errores Diagnósticos , Procedimientos Quirúrgicos Electivos , Humanos , Laparoscopía
20.
Stud Hist Philos Sci ; 49: 1-17, 2015 Feb.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26109406

RESUMEN

Around 1900, several experimenters investigated turbulences in wind tunnels or water basins by creating visualizations. One of them, the German zoologist Friedrich Ahlborn (1858-1937), was familiar with the works by his contemporaries but he struck a new path. He combined three different kinds of photographs taken at the same time and showed the same situation in his water trough-but each in a different way. With this first basic operation, Ahlborn heuristically opened up a previously non-existent space for experimentation, analysis, and recombination. He generated an astonishing diversity of information by adopting the tactics of 'inversions' in which he interpreted one part of the experimental setup, or its results, in different ways. Between the variants of the 'autographs' which he developed, he defined areas of intersection to be able to translate results from individual records into each other. To this end, Ahlborn created other sets of visual artifacts such as drawn diagrams, three-dimensional wire frame constructions, and clay reliefs. His working method can be described as a cascading array of successive modeling steps, as elaborated by Eric Winsberg (1999), or of inscriptions in Bruno Latour's words (Latour, 1986). By examining Ahlborn's procedures closely we propose conceptualizations for the experimenter's various operations.


Asunto(s)
Movimientos del Aire , Biofisica/historia , Movimientos del Agua , Biofisica/instrumentación , Historia del Siglo XIX , Historia del Siglo XX , Hidrodinámica
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