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  2. Koch's work was important for 3 main reasons. He developed a method for staining and photographing microorganisms using dye. He discovered the specific germs that caused a number of diseases: anthrax in 1876, tuberculosis in 1882, and cholera in 1883. He developed the use of agar jelly for growing bacterial cultures on which he could experiment.

  3. Robert Koch, (born Dec. 11, 1843, Clausthal, Hannover—died May 27, 1910, Baden-Baden, Ger.), German physician. As the first to isolate the anthrax bacillus, observe its life cycle, and develop a preventive inoculation for it, he was the first to prove a causal relationship between a bacillus and a disease. He perfected pure-culture techniques ...

  4. Apr 12, 2024 · Germ theory, in medicine, the theory that certain diseases are caused by the invasion of the body by microorganisms. The French chemist and microbiologist Louis Pasteur, the English surgeon Joseph Lister, and the German physician Robert Koch are given much of the credit for development and acceptance of the theory.

  5. Mar 24, 2015 · In many respects, the modern era of tuberculosis began in the mind of a 29-year-old German physician named Robert Koch, who in 1872 was appointed the district medical officer in Wollstein (a tiny ...

  6. Sep 1, 2001 · The Legacy of Robert Koch. Arch Pathol Lab Med (2001) 125 (9): 1148–1149. Never in the history of bacteriology did so much happen so quickly as in the last quarter of the 19th century. On the evening of March 24, 1882, an epoch-making lecture was delivered to a stunned audience at the University of Berlin's Physiological Institute.

  7. Koch's postulates. Robert Hermann Koch (11 December 1843 – 27 May 1910) was a German physician who developed Koch's postulates. [1] Koch's postulates ( / kɒx / KOKH) [2] are four criteria designed to establish a causal relationship between a microbe and a disease. The postulates were formulated by Robert Koch and Friedrich Loeffler in 1884 ...

  8. Aug 26, 2021 · Robert Koch, a founding father of microbiology, used hands-on experiments in the 1800s to find the bacteria behind three of history's deadliest diseases. Robert Koch peers into a microscope in his ...

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