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         Gajdusek D Carleton:     more books (97)
  1. Studies of mind, brain, sex, and language: From tropics to arctic on two hemispheres : January 1, 1992 to December 31, 1992 by D. Carleton Gajdusek, 1995
  2. Western Pacific journal, January 4, 1978 to August 14, 1978 by D. Carleton Gajdusek, 1988
  3. Unconventional viruses causing the spongiform virus encephalopathies: A fruitless search for the coat and core by D. Carleton Gajdusek, 1979
  4. Stumbling along the tortuous road to unanticipated nobility: Melanesian, Indonesian, and Malaysian expedition by D. Carleton Gajdusek, 1996
  5. Journal of further explorations in the Kuru Region and in the Kukukuku country, Eastern Highlands of Eastern New Guinea and of a return to West New Guinea: December 25, 1963 to May 4, 1964 by D. Carleton Gajdusek, 1980
  6. New Guinea Journal, Parts One and Two. October 2, 1961 to August 4, 1962. by D Carleton. Gajdusek, 1979-01-01
  7. Journal of an expedition to the western Caroline Islands by D. Carleton Gajdusek, 1966
  8. Solomon Island, New Britain, and east New Guinea journal, January 7, 1960 to May 6, 1960 by D. Carleton Gajdusek, 1964
  9. Melanesian journal;: Expeditions in West and East New Guinea, Solomon Islands, New Hebrides, Fiji, and New Caledonia, to study child growth and development, ... and kuru, February 22, 1963 to July 23, 1963 by D. Carleton Gajdusek, 1973
  10. Bibliography of Viliuisk encephalomyelitis in the Iakut people of Siberia by D. Carleton Gajdusek, 1986
  11. Western Pacific journal: An account of medical research expeditions ... January 4, 1978 to September 23, 1978 by D. Carleton Gajdusek, 1986
  12. Infectious agents in rheumatic disease by D. Carleton Gajdusek, 1975
  13. Kuru by D. Carleton Gajdusek, 1963
  14. Journal of a Trip to the Shepherd, Banks and Torres Islands and to Espiritu Santo and Efate in the New Hebrides. November... by D Carleton. Gajdusek, 1973

81. Yale Medicine-On Campus
Blumberg shared the 1976 Nobel Prize in Medicine with D. carleton gajdusek, MD,for their discoveries concerning new mechanisms for the origin and
http://www.med.yale.edu/external/pubs/ym_su99/campus/campus.htm

More News
A case study in corporate resuscitation Top More
Shades of gray in the human genome Top More
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DNA sequencing and genome-mapping have moved biology into a new world where researchers try to keep pace with the explosion of information and ideas, Nobel laureate Walter Gilbert, Ph.D., told a standing-room-only audience of graduate students, postdocs and researchers in May. Gilbert, a microbiologist at Harvard who invented DNA sequencing, delivered the seventh annual Edward A. Adelberg Lecture in Genetics. He shared the 1980 Nobel Prize in chemistry with Frederick Sanger for their work in determining base sequences in
nucleic acids.
Also in On Campus:

A case study in corporate resuscitation
Shades of gray in the human genome Biology's new world
top of page

Originally published in Yale Medicine, Summer 1999.

82. Mielipide
Kirjoituksessa annetaan ymmärtää, että vuoden 1976 lääketieteen nobelistit Baruch S.Blumberg ja D. carleton gajdusek saivat palkinnon samasta hermostoa
http://www.helsinki.fi/agora/vara/mielipide/palkinnot_hepatiitin_ja_kurun_ansios
Esko Kaarsalo
professori, Loimaa
Palkinnot hepatiitin ja kurun ansiosta
Yliopisto -lehden numerossa 5/2001 oli sinänsä kiinnostava artikkelikokonaisuus Nobel-palkintojen jaosta. Satu Elon kirjoittamassa osuudessa sivulla 11 oli kuitenkin asiavirhe, joka arvostetussa lehdessä ansainnee korjauksen. Kirjoituksessa annetaan ymmärtää, että vuoden 1976 lääketieteen nobelistit Baruch S. Blumberg ja D. Carleton Gajdusek saivat palkinnon samasta hermostoa rappeuttavasta sairaudesta tehdystä havainnosta. Tosiasiassa kuitenkin Baruch S. Blumberg palkittiin hepatiitti B -viruksen löytymiseen johtaneista tutkimushavainnoista ja D. Carleton Gajdusek havainnoista, jotka osoittivat hermostoa rappeuttavan kuru-sairauden olevan infektiosairaus. Molemmat löydöt ansaitsivat varmasti artikkelissa paikkansa eli palkitsemisen myöntämisperustelua lainaten: "for their discoveries concerning new mechanisms for the origin and dissemination of infectious diseases". Paluu Kirjoitan

83. Ljdart
gajdusek, D. carleton. Unconventional viruses and the origin and disappearanceof kuru. Science 1977; 197 943960. 6. Manuelidis, Elias E. Transmission of
http://home.vicnet.net.au/~globalsn/ljdart.htm
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NEXUS, December 1997 - January 1998, pages 11-14.
From Mad Cows to Humans :
The Next Global Plague.
Dr. LYNETTE J DUMBLE
Co-ordinator, Global Sisterhood Network, Australia.

Formerly a rare disease which affected less than one per million in most countries, one worst case scenario predicts that BSE-infected meat will push the incidence of CJD in humans to claim ten thousand British lives by the year 2000, and a further ten million by the year 2010. Another predicts that half the British people, some 30 million, will be left brain-dead by CJD. As Chris Warneís mother commented, her son was a health-conscious sportsman, but ìafter winning medals in March, by July he couldnít stand on his feet, and by October he was goneî. A CJD epidemic of these proportions largely defies contemplation, but at the same time it raises important questions of whether nature or human error was responsible for the unprecedented assault of CJD and BSE on humans and animals, and whether the public health implications will, at best, be restricted to Britain, and her European cronies, or, at worst, will become a global disaster. Faced with a worldwide boycott of British beef, millions of cattle destined for cremation, and BSE emerging in cattle all across Europe, authorities have disenchantingly persisted with face-saving reassurances, the majority of which are disproven with monotonous regularity. In keeping with the 1960s to 1985 medical imperialism which turned infertile women and short-statured children into human incubators of CJD with injections of hormones harvested from the pituitary glands of human cadavers, mad cow imperialists view Third World countries as a dumping ground for BSE-infected meat in their thrust to salvage some cash from the chaos.

84. The Brain Eater
The hero is a flamboyant physician, D. carleton gajdusek, who became aware ofspongiform disease in the 1950 s when he worked among cannibals in the New
http://www.nytimes.com/books/97/03/16/reviews/970316.16johnsot.html

85. China Invites Nobel Laureate To Help Combat Mad Cow Disease
PDO D. carleton gajdusek, winner of the 1976 Nobel Prize in medicine, wasinvited by the Beijing Inspection and Quarantine Bureau to act as a consultant
http://english.people.com.cn/200210/19/eng20021019_105343.shtml
About Us Help Sitemap Archive ... China Last updated at: (Beijing Time) Saturday, October 19, 2002
China Invites Nobel Laureate to Help Combat Mad Cow Disease
D. Carleton Gajdusek, winner of the 1976 Nobel Prize in medicine, was invited by the Beijing Inspection and Quarantine Bureau to act as a consultant for the bureau's mad cow disease lab.
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D. Carleton Gajdusek, winner of the 1976 Nobel Prize in medicine, was invited by the Beijing Inspection and Quarantine Bureau to act as a consultant for the bureau's mad cow disease lab.
Gajdusek, awarded the Nobel Prize for his discoveries concerning "new mechanisms for the origin and dissemination of infectious disease," said he would help China improve its researchand prevention of mad cow disease.
Wei Chuanzhong, director of the bureau, said the issue of food safety has increasingly become a concern for all governments and the spread of mad cow disease poses a threat to mankind.
He said he believes that with the American laureate's expertise,the lab will advance in terms of testing methods for the disease.
The bureau's mad cow disease lab is China's first and has mastered a number of ways to test for the disease. A research center is in the planning to further the country's fight against the deadly disease.

86. [Fredrickson With Nobel Laureates Marshall Nirenberg, Carleton Gajdusek, And Jul
with Nobel Laureates Marshall Nirenberg, carleton gajdusek, and Julius Axelrod gajdusek shared the 1976 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine with
http://profiles.nlm.nih.gov/FF/B/B/D/Z/
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The Donald S. Fredrickson Papers
Title:
[Fredrickson with Nobel Laureates Marshall Nirenberg, Carleton Gajdusek, and Julius Axelrod]
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This photograph was taken after the announcement that Gajdusek had won the Nobel Prize. Gajdusek shared the 1976 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine with Baruch S. Blumberg "for their discoveries concerning new mechanisms for the origin and dissemination of infectious diseases."
Number of Image Pages:
1 (110,568 Bytes)
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Courtesy of Donald S. Fredrickson.
profiles@nlm.nih.gov
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NIH Director, 1975-1981: Biomedical Research in a Time of Trial
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87. HONORARY DEGREES
D. carleton gajdusek, MD, Doctor of Science, UMDNJ, 1987. Robert C. Gallo, MD,Doctor of Science, UMDNJ, 1986. Marilyn Hughes Gaston, MD, Doctor of Humane
http://www.umdnj.edu/acadweb/honors.htm
University Office of Academic Affairs UMDNJ CRITERIA FOR THE AWARD OF HONORARY DEGREES Honorary Degree Recipients
Alphabetical List

Chronological List

This statement should be used as a guide for those who wish to make nominations for honorary degrees. The purpose of conferring an honorary degree by an academic institution is to recognize certain individuals who have made exceptional contributions to knowledge and/or the welfare of society, accomplishments which are worthy of being cited at a formal public academic ceremony. UMDNJ, as a health professions, biomedical sciences and health-care institution, naturally tends to bestow honorary degrees for achievements in these spheres of activity. However the University does not limit its honorary degrees in this manner. Individuals who make significant and lasting contributions to society through other types of activities may and should also be considered. Criteria include:
  • the individual has added significantly to the improvement of human health (or provided means for eventually doing so) by his/her professional and/or personal accomplishments in science, the healing arts, community service or public affairs; the individual has (or deserves) national or international renown based on meritorious achievements;

88. Nobel Laureates At Penn
with D. carleton gajdusek; Awarded for their discoveries concerning new mechanismsfor the origin and dissemination of infectious diseases.
http://www.archives.upenn.edu/histy/notables/awards/nobel.html
University Archives and Records Center University of Pennsylvania Nobel Laureates at the University of Pennsylvania
Awarded annually since 1901 by the Nobel Foundation , Stockholm.
Edward C. Prescott, 1940 - Economics, 2004
  • With Finn E. Kydland (Carnegie-Mellon University and the University of California Santa Barbara). Awarded for their contributions to dynamic macroeconomics: the time consistency ot economic policy and the driving forces behind business cycles. Prescott came to Penn in 1966 as a lecturer in the Economics Department. He was an assistant professor here from 1967 to 1971. Nobel Foundation information on this award.
Irwin A. Rose, 1926 - Chemistry, 2004
  • With Aaron Ciechanover and Avram Hershko (Technion-Israel Institute of Technology, Haifa, Israel). Awarded for the discovery of ubiquitin-mediated protein degradation. Rose joined Penn's faculty during the 1970s. Rose was awarded a

89. Science 1977 Sep 2; 197(4307): 943-60
Translate this page Dezember 1976 erklärte D. carleton gajdusek, Kuru sei die erste chronischdegenerative Krankheit des Menschen gewesen, bei der man habe zeigen können,
http://www.heynkes.de/gelesen/aeid.htm
Science 1977 Sep 2; 197(4307): 943-60
Roland Heynkes, 15.3.2002 (zuletzt aktualisiert am 20.3.2002)
Gliederung
bibliographische Angaben meine Zusammenfassung des Artikels
bibliographische Angaben
Gajdusek,D.C. Unconventional viruses and the origin and disappearance of kuru - Science 1977 Sep 2; 197(4307): 943-60
meine Zusammenfassung des Artikels
Kuru sei die erste chronisch degenerative Agens Kuru Kuru ... RNA -Virus zwar nicht in gereinigter Form, aber doch immerhin im Pflanzensaft sogar noch strahlungsresistenter sei. Kuru CJK Scrapie Inkubationszeit ... Inkubationszeit 30 Monate) und Meerschweinchen. In der zweiten Passage Inkubationszeit Kuru und CJK nicht erfolgreich. CJK-infizierte Affen starben teilweise nach nur wenigen Tagen Krankheit oder sogar ohne vorher beobachtete Symptome . Mit Hirn homogenat intrazerebral e Inokulation auf 2 Schimpansen ( Inkubationszeit en 12 bzw. 13 Monate), einen Kapuzineraffen (Unterfamilie Cebinae, capuchin) ( Inkubationszeit 31 Monate) und einen Krallenaffen (Unterfamilie Callitrichidae, marmoset) ( Inkubationszeit 43 Monate). Mit Hirn

90. Index G - Frank Macfarlane Burnet Guide To Records
gajdusek, D. carleton 254 2-55 9-20 9-35 10-3 10-4 10-6 10-9 10-13 10-14 10-1510-16 10-17 10-18 10-20 10-21 10-22 10-23 10-24 10-38
http://www.austehc.unimelb.edu.au/guides/burn/index_g.htm
Frank Macfarlane Burnet Guide to Records
Index
A
B C D ...
Index
G
Gabor, D.
Gajdusek Journal
Gajdusek, D. Carleton
Gale
Galloway, J. A.
Gard, Sven
Garvard, R.
Gault, E. W.
Gear (?) Geelong College Geelong Grammar School Geigy Conference on Research in Psychiatry Geller (?) Gemour (?) Genes, Dreams and Realities Genes, Dreams and Realities Genetic code Genetic disease Genetic Engineering ( see also Molecular biology) Genetic Error Genetics Geneva Gentech Australia Pty Ltd Geology Gerard (?) Geriatrics Germ line genes Germ warfare German, J. Gerontology Ghapure, P. V. Gibbs, A. J. Gibbs, C. J. Giddy, Andrew Giddy, David Giddy, Deborah ( neé Burnet) Giddy, Elizabeth Giddy, Harry Giddy, John Gilmour, S. M. Girvan, D. W. Glandular fever ( see also Mononucleosis) Glaser, D. A. Glasse, R. M. Glasse, S. Glenewart Project Glenn, Archibald Glenn, J. R. A. Global Homeostasis Golden Staph Goldstrum Goodpasture, Ernest Gorton, J. G. Gorton, John Gottschalk, A. Gotze, P. H. Grabar (?) Graeves, Robert Graham, J. Grant, B. Grant, J. K. Gray, G. H. Gray, N. Graydon, J. J. Greaves, M. F. Greece Gresford, G. B.

91. Lecture - Culture
consulted D. carleton gajdusek of the US National Institutes of SOURCEReproduced by permission from D. carleton gajdusek, ëUnconventional Viruses
http://lucy.ukc.ac.uk/Courses/SE302/Lecture_Culture_1b.html
Culture and
human biological variation

Social anthropologists often conceptualize culture as external to
biology, and indeed, that once added into the stream of human
evolution, largely replaces biology as the main force influencing
the destiny of humankind.
However
Biology - by its influence on our sensory organs - has a
profound affect on how we perceive our environment, influencing
the raw material that we have to reform through culture.
Culture can go beyond our senses into abstract ideas which are themselves free of physical restraint, but the bridge between ideas and the world must conform to physical restraint. Human culture has had, and continues to have, a profound effect on the physical world, and thus ultimately on our biological context. Variation due to different human cultures are an important aspect of human biological variation. Cultural Plasticity Whatever the premise of culture, it must fulfill certain criteria to be 'successful', in the sense that the culture (and the people associated with it) persist over time. This is not the

92. Eye - More Fun With Those Mad Cows And Englishmen - 07.10.97
He begins by recounting the discovery in the 50s by Dr. D. carleton gajdusek,an American pediatrician and virologist, of the cause of a disease called
http://www.eye.net/eye/issue/issue_07.10.97/news_views/enviro.html
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ENVIRO More fun with those Mad Cows and Englishmen BY BOB HUNTER I have finally digested Richard Rhodes' book Deadly Feasts, and I find myself infected with new levels of paranoia about just what else I may be infected with, having gorged on as much meat as I have in my life. His subject matter is something you wouldn't want to try to swallow in one sitting. The seed of a hideous and always-fatal brain disease, Rhodes contends, may be in you and me already. This is the goriest nonfiction book I have ever read. He begins by recounting the discovery in the '50s by Dr. D. Carleton Gajdusek, an American pediatrician and virologist, of the cause of a disease called kuru, which was killing off women and children in the Eastern Highlands of New Guinea. It turned out the cause was the quaint native custom of recycling dead relatives as food. The connection should have been easy to figure out, since only the women and children in a few particular tribes were partaking in ritual acts of endocannibalism. But the scientific proof of a link was utterly missing. It must be some sort of an infection, Gajdusek assumed at first, passed along in the meat or perhaps the brain, a favorite morsel. But where there is infection, there is always inflammation and with kuru disease, there was none at all.

93. HISTORIA Y CLASIFICACION DE LAS ENFERMEDADES PRIONICAS HUMANAS
Translate this page Transmisibilidad carleton gajdusek y cols Early letters and field-notes fromthe collection of D. carleton gajdusek. Nueva York Raven Press, 1981.
http://svneurologia.org/congreso/priones-3.html
HISTORIA Y CLASIFICACION DE LAS ENFERMEDADES PRIONICAS HUMANAS José M. Polo Servicio de Neurología
Hospital Universitario "Marqués de Valdecilla"
39008 - Santander. España. e-mail: polojm@medi.unican.es "The history of the SSE reads a bit like an Indiana Jones film"
(Sato y Roos, 1997)
Lo que sigue pretende sólo ser una modesta introducción a una cuestión apasionante. La historia de las encefalopatías espongiformes subagudas, que actualmente se prefiere denominar enfermedades por priones, se parece a una novela por entregas desde sus inicios en la académica neurología alemana de comienzos de siglo. Indígenas caníbales de selvas tropicales, epidemias de locura en animales domésticos, trascendentes desafíos a los fundamentos de la biología tradicional, premios Nobel ya concedidos o en vías de conceder o injustamente denegados, insomnios incoercibles y mortales y un largo etcétera de sorprendentes acontecimientos, dificultan el vaticinio de un futuro lógico para estas enfermedades. No es tarea fácil resumir su historia. Pero, además, la auténtica historia de estas enfermedades se está escribiendo en la actualidad. A poco que pensemos en todo lo que resta por explicar, es inevitable dudar a la hora de conceder más o menos importancia a uno u otro acontecimiento. Como afirmó Vincent Zigas, pionero investigador del kuru, al finalizar su memorable libro

94. »O¤jÂå¹Ï°Ñ¦Ò®Ñ¥Ø¿ý
Michael P. Alpers, D. carleton gajdusek,Steven G. Ono. WL359 G137 1975, Study ofChildGrowth and Development and Disease Patterns in Primitive Cultures,
http://ntuml.mc.ntu.edu.tw/lib-resource/lib06/show.asp?class=WL

95. ACADÉMICOS HONORARIOS EXTRANJEROS
Translate this page gajdusek, D. carleton, EE.UU. Gonella, Joseph S. EE.UU. Guerra de Macedo, Carlyle,Brasil. Guglielmone, Oscar, Uruguay. Heuschen, Folke, Suecia
http://www.acamedbai.org.ar/pagina/academia/acahonex.htm
ACADÉMICOS HONORARIOS EXTRANJEROS Andrews, Joseph L. EE.UU Bargen, J. Arnold EE.UU. Bockus, H. EE.UU. Botella Llusiá, José España Clarkson, Thomas William EE.UU. Crohn, Burril EE.UU. Crottogini, Juan J. Uruguay Chagas, Carlos (Filho) Brasil Chávez, Ignacio México Debré, Robert Francia De Toni, Giovanni Italia Erdmann, James B. EE.UU. Ferrari, Manlio Uruguay Gajdusek, D. Carleton EE.UU. Gonella, Joseph S. EE.UU. Guerra de Macedo, Carlyle Brasil Guglielmone, Oscar Uruguay Heuschen, Folke Suecia Hollender, Louis Francia Kernberg, Otto EE.UU. Kumate Rodríguez, José México Lejeune, Jérôme Francia Liguory, Claude Francia López Ibor, Juan José España Lorenzo Velázquez, B. España Mahler, Halfdant Dinamarca Malmejac, Jean Argelia Manzanilla, Manuel A. México Mathieu, Henry Francia McCuskey Brooks, Chandler EE.UU. Monckeberg Barros, Fernando Chile Montagnier, Luc Francia Moreno González, Enrique España Norrby, Erling C. J. Suecia Obwegeser, Hugo Suiza Peluffo, Ciro Uruguay Pinotti, José A. Brasil Portmann, Michel Francia Ramírez Boettner, Carlos M. Paraguay Roche, Jean

96. New Accessions And Unprocessed Collections, 1997
Name of Collection gajdusek, D. carleton. Papers. Dates Quantity 40 hollingerboxes Restrictions No patron photocopying is permitted.
http://www.nlm.nih.gov/hmd/manuscripts/1997acc.html
Skip to Content Search NLM Web Site NLM Home Contact NLM Site Map FAQs History of Medicine History Home About Us Visit Us Contact Us ... Archives and Modern Manuscripts Program
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This list represents brief descriptions of unprocessed collections, or unprocessed additions to collections, and is primarily for informational purposes only. There may be donor imposed restrictions, HMD imposed restrictions, or no descriptions of collection contents. Please contact the HMD Reference Staff regarding access to these collections. Note on Access
The majority of these collections are stored offsite and require 24 hours prior notice for service. Please contact the Associate Curator for access information. This page is searchable using your browser's "Find" command (Ctrl F). For more information regarding collections, see LocatorPlus Accession #:
Name of Collection:
Gajdusek, D. Carleton. Papers.
Dates:
Quantity:
40 hollinger boxes
Restrictions: No patron photocopying is permitted. Content: Photocopies of original correspondence arranged alphabetically. Kuru. Contains correspondence, audio, video, photographs, and research files.

97. Alfons Maria Jakob (1884-1931)
gajdusek, D. (eds) Kuru Early Letters and Field Notes in
http://www.historiadelamedicina.org/jakob.htm
Enfermedad de Creutzfeldt-Jakob
Imagen tomada del
Neuropathologie (Universidad de Hamburgo) Alfons Maria Jakob (1884-1931) Emil Kraepelin Friedrichsberg State Hospital Die Grosshirnrinde des Menschen Normale und Pathologische Anatomie und Histologie des Grosshirns Creutzfeldt Die Extrapyramidale Erkrankungen Creutzfeldt Creutzfeldt Las preparaciones de Creutzfeldt se perdieron durante la segunda guerra mundial, pero las de Jakob se conservaron. Fueron revisadas después por Kirschbaum, van Rossum, Masters, Gajdusek y Richardson. Masters y Gajdusek tuvieron la oportunidad de revisarlas todas excepto las del caso cuarto, que se habían perdido. Con criterios más actuales, sólo los casos tercero y quinto se consideran ejemplos de encefalopatía espongiforme. Incluso para Masters y Gadjdusek, éste último sería el primer caso de "encefalopatía espongiforme transmisible" de la literatura científica. El tercer caso ( Ernst Kahn Auguste Hoffmann Medical Journal of Australia el trabajo Kuru: Clinical Study of a New Syndrome Resembling Paralysis Agitans in Natives of the Eastern Highlands of Australian New Guinea scrapie The Lancet en 1959 (Scrapie and Kuru) Por otra parte, en 1966 Alper y otros investigadores intentaron inactivar al agente infeccioso del

98. AIDS PUBLIC CONCERN BEGINS TO (PREMATURELY) WANE
These might replace condoms as the safesex method of choice, said D. CarletonGajdusek, chief of the laboratory of central nervous system studies at the
http://focus.hms.harvard.edu/1994/Dec16_1994/Aids.html
AIDS: PUBLIC CONCERN BEGINS TO (PREMATURELY) WANE
A growing perception on the part of many Americans that the threat of AIDS is diminishing-along with a maelstrom of reports about failed potential treatments-could be pushing public concern over AIDS into the doldrums. "We're really in the long-haul stage now. A lot of the initial terror, but also a lot of the initial excitement [over early scientific breakthroughs], has worn off. This is not a fine time for AIDS, if ever there was one," said Gerald Friedland, professor of medicine, epidemiology and public health at Yale University School of Medicine, speaking at Beth Israel Hospital on Nov. 29. Friedland's lecture was part of a universitywide commemoration of AIDS Awareness Week. Symposia, exhibits, films, plays and musical performances, taking place at Harvard Medical School and on the main Harvard campus, drew renewed attention to the global problem of AIDS. A central message that emerged from events at HMS is that finding a cure for AIDS is no longer seen by the public as a top priority. This lessening of concern is due, in part, to the lack of clinical breakthroughs. "Nearly 15 years into the AIDS pandemic we have only limited and expensive treatments," said Max Essex, Mary Woodard Lasker Professor of Health Sciences at HSPH and director of the Harvard Aids Institute, at a symposium held Dec. 1. Public and political attention to the disease also has fallen due to a widespread perception that the spread of AIDS is slowing in the U.S., said Arnold Relman, professor of medicine and social medicine, emeritus. The decline is fueled by an additional belief, he said, "that AIDS in the U.S. largely affects 'them' not 'us,' the 'them' being homosexual males, drug abusers and their sexual contacts." The result is that "the [majority of the] American public no longer feels threatened."

99. BorNet. Revista Sobre Ciencias

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D. Carleton Gajdusek junto con Vicent Zigas describieron en 1957 el primer caso de Kuru
  • Zigas, V. and Gajdusek, D. (1957) Kuru: Clinical Study of a New Syndrome Resembling Paralysis Agitans in Natives of the Eastern Highlands of Australian New Guinea, Medical Journal of Australia, 2, 745-54
    Klatzo I, Gajdusek DC, Zigas V. Pathology of Kuru. Lab Invest 1959; 8: 799-847 Hadlow W.J. Scrapie and Kuru. The Lancet 1959; 2: 289-290.
    Gajdusek, D.C., Gibbs, C. and Alpers, M. (1966) Experimental Transmission of a Kuru-like Syndrome to Chimpanzees, Nature, 209, 794-6. Gajdusek D.C. Unconventional viruses and the origin and disappearance of kuru. Science. 1977;197:943-60. Williams, E.S. y Young, S. 1980. Chronic wasting disease of captive mule deer: a spongiform encephalopathy. J. Wildlife Diseases 16, 89-98. Marsh, R.F., Burger, D. y Hanson, R.P. 1969. Transmissible mink encephalopathy: Behaviour of the disease agent in mink. Am. J. Vet. Res. 30, 1637-1642.

100. ¢Æ¢Æ¢Æ û¼Ò³â °úÇи¶´ç¿¡ ¿À½Å°ÍÀ» ȯ¿µÇÕ´Ï
Translate this page The summary for this Korean page contains characters that cannot be correctly displayed in this language/character set.
http://www.most.go.kr/most/Young_most/novel1.html
von Behring, Emil Adolf Ross, Sir Ronald Finsen, Niels Ryberg Pavlov, Ivan Petrovich Koch, Robert Golgi, Camillo Laveran, Charles Louis Alphonse Ehrlich, Paul Metchnikoff, Elie Kocher, Emil Theodor Kossel, Albrecht Gullstrand, Allvar Carrel, Alexis Richet, Charles Robert
Bordet, Jules Krogh, Schack August Steenberg
Hill, Sir Archibald Vivian Banting, Sir Frederich Grant Macleod, John James Richard Einthoven, Willem
Fibiger, Johannes Andreas Grib Wagner-Jauregg, Julius Nicolle, Charles Jules Henri Eijkman, Christiaan Hopkins, Sir Frederick Gowland Landsteiner, Karl Warburg, Otto Heinrich Sherrington, Sir Charles Scott Adrian, Lord-Edgar Douglas Morgan, Thomas Hunt Whipple, George Hoyt Minot, George Richards Murphy, William Parry Spemann, Hans Dale, Sir Henry Hallett Domagk, Gerhard
Dam, Henrik Carl Peter Doisy, Edward Adelbert ºñŸ¹Î K ¹ß°ß ºñŸ¹Î KÀÇ È­ÇÐÀû º»¼º ¹ß°ß Erlanger, Joseph Gasser, Herbert Spencer Fleming, Sir Alexander Chain, Sir Ernst Boris Florey, Lord(Howard Walter) Muller, Hermann Joseph X¼±¿¡ ÀÇÇÑ Àΰø µ¹¿¬º¯ÀÌ ¿¬±¸ Houssay, Bernardo Alberto

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