Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. www.biography.com › scientist › gertrude-b-elionGertrude B. Elion - Biography

    Apr 2, 2014 · American biochemist and pharmacologist Gertrude B. Elion helped develop drugs to treat leukemia and prevent kidney transplant rejection. She won a Nobel Prize for medicine in 1988.

  2. Gertrude B. Elion was an American pharmacologist who, along with George H. Hitchings and Sir James W. Black, received the Nobel Prize for Physiology or Medicine in 1988 for their development of drugs used to treat several major diseases.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  3. The drugs they developed are used to treat a variety of maladies, such as leukemia, malaria, lupus, hepatitis, arthritis, gout, [25] organ transplant rejection ( azathioprine ), as well as herpes ( acyclovir, which was the first selective and effective drug of its kind). [26]

  4. Jun 3, 2021 · When she was a teenager, her grandfather died of stomach cancer, prompting Elion to study science in search of a drug to cure cancer. She attended Hunter College on a full merit scholarship – a necessity as the stock market crash of 1929 left her family bankrupt.

  5. People also ask

  6. Dec 4, 2007 · In 1937, just after she completed her chemistry studies at Hunter College in New York, Elion lost her fiancé to a bacterial infection, and her passion for finding cures for illness was redoubled. Elion entered New York University’s graduate chemistry program in 1939.

  7. On the Road to the Nobel. In addition to 6-MP, Elion went on to discover a series of drugs that attack the life cycle of nucleic acid, including allopurinolwhich inhibits uric acid synthesis, making it a viable treatment for gout—and azathioprine (Imuran), an effective immunosuppressive drug.

  8. Feb 22, 1999 · Gertrude Elion: No, actually the person is searching for a cure, but then his wife dies of the same disease. He was already on the track, but it just pushed him a little harder. You must have related to that.

  1. People also search for