History of Microbiology

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HISTORY OF MICROBIOLOGY Medical Microbiology Mrs. Bagwell

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History of Microbiology. Medical Microbiology Mrs. Bagwell. Scientific Revolution. Robert Hooke Englishman, mechanic and tinker C reated first working microscope First to observe dead cells Developed “ C ell Theory”. Cell Theory. The parts to the cell theory are as described below : - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of History of Microbiology

History of Microbiology

History of MicrobiologyMedical MicrobiologyMrs. Bagwell

Scientific Revolution Robert HookeEnglishman, mechanic and tinkerCreated first working microscope First to observe dead cells Developed Cell Theory

Cell TheoryThe parts to the cell theory are as described below:

All living organisms are composed of one or more cells.The cell is the basic unit of structure, function, and organization in all organisms.All cells come from pre-existing, living cells.

Anton Van Leewenhoek (1673) Dutch merchant Develop a microscope using magnifying lens (300X) First to see live cells- named them animalcules Studied pond water, scrapings from mouth, etc.

Spontaneous Generation (abiogenesis) Life forms arose spontaneously from non-living matter. Wildly held belief until the mid-1800s Challenged by Rudolf Virchow (1858) with concept of BIOGENESIS (cells an only come from other cells)

Francesco Redi (1668) Did experiments to disprove Spontaneous Generation Ran convincing experiments

Pasteur (1857) Demonstrated that organisms are in the air Developed germ theory of fermentaion Hired to see why wine spoiled Also, proved that boiling kills organisms (led to pasteurization)

Golden AgeGerm Theory of Disease Microorganisms might cause disease Led to ASEPSIS techniquesPasteur (pasteurization)Lister (use of carbolic acid to stop disease after surgery)Semmelweis (handwashing before child birth to prevent puerperal fever)

Kochs Postulates (1876)The microorganism must be found in abundance in all organisms suffering from the disease, but should not be found in healthy organisms.The microorganism must be isolated from a diseased organism and grown in pure culture.The cultured microorganism should cause disease when introduced into a healthy organism.The microorganism must be re-isolated from the inoculated, diseased experimental host and identified as being identical to the original specific causative agent

Edward Jenner (1796) Studied smallpox Discovered that milk maids with coxpox did not get small pox Tried experiment on 8 year old boy Developed first vaccine

Smallpox

Search for the Magic BulletFirst ChemotherapySynthetic drugsAntibiotics

Synthetic DrugsPrepared from chemicals in laboratoryPaul Ehrlich (1910)- salvarsanSulfa drugs-sulfonamides

antibioticsAlexander Fleming, Scottish (1928)