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  1. Kiyoshi Shiga (志賀 潔, Shiga Kiyoshi, February 7, 1871 – January 25, 1957) was a Japanese physician and bacteriologist. He had a well-rounded education and career that led to many scientific discoveries.

  2. Apr 8, 2024 · Shiga Kiyoshi was a Japanese bacteriologist, chiefly noted for his discovery (1897) of the dysentery bacillus Shigella, which is named after him. Shiga graduated from the University of Tokyo in 1896. Two years earlier he had begun work with Kitasato Shibasaburo, who had discovered the tetanus.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  3. Nov 1, 1999 · Dr. Kiyoshi Shiga: Discoverer of the Dysentery Bacillus | Clinical Infectious Diseases | Oxford Academic. Journal Article. Dr. Kiyoshi Shiga: Discoverer of the Dysentery Bacillus. Andrew F. Trofa. , Hannah Ueno-Olsen. , Ruiko Oiwa. , Masanosuke Yoshikawa.

    • Andrew F. Trofa, Hannah Ueno-Olsen, Ruiko Oiwa, Masanosuke Yoshikawa
    • 1999
  4. Shiga of Shigellosis. Kiyoshi Shiga (1870–1957) was born in Sendai, Japan. His innate family boasted 4 generations of physicians. After graduation from the Tokyo Imperial University in 1896, he was appointed assistant at the Tokyo Research Institute of Infectious Diseases.

    • William S Haubrich
    • 2003
  5. there has been remarkably little written about Dr. Kiyoshi Shiga, discoverer of the dysentery bacillus. We submit a brief biography of Dr. Shiga and the circumstances leading to his discovery, which proved the bacterial etiology of nonamebic dysentery. In 1936, as a senior scientist and honored guest at the ter-

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  7. Mar 21, 2016 · This human-adapted clone of Escherichia coli 9 was isolated for the first time by Kiyoshi Shiga during a dysentery outbreak in Japan, during which 90,000 cases and 20,000 deaths occurred in the ...

  8. Nov 1, 1999 · A brief biography of Dr. Kiyoshi Shiga, discoverer of the dysentery bacillus, and the circumstances leading to his discovery, which proved the bacterial etiology of nonamebic Dysentery. The clinical manifestations of dysentery have been described for centuries, and the prototypic bacterial agent, Shigella dysenteriae, was identified 100 years ago.

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