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  1. I only discovered it by accident .”. Alexander Fleming was a Scottish physician-scientist who was recognised for discovering penicillin. The simple discovery and use of the antibiotic agent has saved millions of lives, and earned Fleming – together with Howard Florey and Ernst Chain, who devised methods for the large-scale isolation and ...

  2. Oct 1, 2019 · Current Opinion in Microbiology. Antibiotics: past, present and future. The first antibiotic, salvarsan, was deployed in 1910. In just over 100 years antibiotics have drastically changed modern medicine and extended the average human lifespan by 23 years. The discovery of penicillin in 1928 started the golden age of natural product antibiotic ...

  3. Abstract. After just over 75 years of penicillin’s clinical use, the world can see that its impact was immediate and profound. In 1928, a chance event in Alexander Fleming’s London laboratory changed the course of medicine. However, the purification and first clinical use of penicillin would take more than a decade.

  4. Sep 28, 2015 · September 28, 2015 9:30 AM EDT. T he bacteriologist Alexander Fleming is recalled as one of the brightest minds in the history of science. TIME once called him “a short (5 ft. 7 in.), gentle ...

  5. May 9, 2024 · penicillin, one of the first and still one of the most widely used antibiotic agents, derived from the Penicillium mold. In 1928 Scottish bacteriologist Alexander Fleming first observed that colonies of the bacterium Staphylococcus aureus failed to grow in those areas of a culture that had been accidentally contaminated by the green mold Penicillium notatum.

  6. Apr 2, 2014 · (1881-1955) Who Was Alexander Fleming? Alexander Fleming was born in Ayrshire, Scotland, on August 6, 1881, and studied medicine, serving as a physician during World War I.

  7. May 22, 2022 · The Foundation Of The Antibiotic Era. Paul Ehrlich and Alexander Fleming are widely credited with ushering in the current "antibiotic era." Ehrlich's idea for a "magic bullet" that selectively targets disease-causing bacteria rather than the host was based on the discovery that aniline and other synthetic dyes, which had only recently become available, could stain some microbes but not others.

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