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  2. Feb 21, 2019 · Karl Landsteiner's contribution to medicine extended beyond blood groupings. In 1906, he developed a technique for the identification of the bacterium ( T. pallidum ) that causes syphilis using dark-field microscopy.

    • Regina Bailey
  3. Karl Landsteiner revolutionized medicine when, in 1900-1901, he identified three major human blood types: A, B, and O, which led to safe blood transfusions and millions of lives saved.

  4. May 21, 2018 · Karl Landsteiner (1868-1943), the Austrian-born American immunologist and Nobel Prize winner, discovered blood groups and helped establish the science of immunochemistry. Karl Landsteiner was born in Vienna on June 14, 1868. In 1891 he was awarded a medical degree by the University of Vienna.

  5. Upon receiving Simon Flexner's (AAI '20) offer of a position at the Rockefeller Institute for Medical Research, Landsteiner moved with his family to New York in the spring of 1923.

  6. Jul 15, 2001 · On February 21, 1891, Landsteiner took a degree in medicine. He then began work in the laboratory of the medical clinic directed by Otto Kahler, who discovered and described the Kahler syndrome, today called “multiple myeloma.”

  7. The ABO grouping was the first of many different groups to be discovered; Landsteiner himself, in 1927, discovered the second and third systems, the MN and the P. For his work on blood groups Landsteiner was awarded the 1930 Nobel Prize for physiology or medicine.

  8. Then 120 years ago, Karl Landsteiner discovered ABO and launched what became transfusion medicine with the final sentence of his 1901 study, as commemoratively reprinted in January 1961, 60 years later and 60 years ago, as the first article in the first issue of TRANSFUSION. “… [T]he reported observations may assist in the explana-

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