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  1. Gerhard Domagk – Biography was born on October 30, 1895, at Lagow, a beautiful, small town in the Brandenburg Marches. Until he was fourteen he went to school in Sommerfeld, where his father was assistant headmaster. His mother, Martha Reimer, came from farming stock in the Marches, where she lived in Sommerfeld until 1945 when she

  2. Abstract. As the discoverer of sulfonamides and Nobel Prize winner for medicine, Gerhard Domagk (1895-1964) is without doubt one of the most important pathologists of the 20th century. Domagk has repeatedly been sketched out as a Nazi victim - especially with reference to the fact that he had been briefly imprisoned and that the Nazi regime ...

  3. academia-lab.com › enciclopedia › gerhard-domagkGerhard Domagk _ AcademiaLab

    Gerhard Johannes Paul Domagk ( Pronunciación alemana: [ˈɡeːɐ̯haʁt ˈdoːmak] ⓘ; 30 de octubre de 1895 – 24 de abril de 1964) fue un patólogo y bacteriólogo alemán. Se le atribuye el descubrimiento de la sulfonamidocrisoidina (KL730) como antibiótico por el que recibió el Premio Nobel de Fisiología o Medicina en 1939.

  4. Gerhard Domagk tên đầy đủ là Gerhard Johannes Paul Domagk (30.10.1895 – 24.4.1964) là một nhà bệnh lý học và vi sinh học người Đức, đã phát hiện ra Sulfonamidochrysoidine (KI-730) – một thuốc kháng sinh đầu tiên có thể buôn bán (tiếp thị dưới tên Prontosil) – do đó ông được nhận giải Nobel Sinh lý và Y khoa năm 1939.

  5. Gerhard Johannes Paul Domagk was born on Oct. 30, 1895, in Lagow in the province of Brandenburg, Germany, the son of a school teacher. He completed his preparatory schooling at Liegnitz in Silesia ...

  6. Gerhard Johannes Paul Domagk ( Lagow 1895. október 30. – Königsfeld im Schwarzwald, 1964. április 24.) német patológus, bakteriológus. 1939-ben neki ítélték az orvostudományi Nobel-díjat az első kereskedelmi forgalomba is kerülő antibiotikumok, a szulfonamidok felfedezéséért. A náci párt kényszerítette, hogy lemondjon a ...

  7. Gerhard Domagk, with his medical degree and years of experience in chemistry and pathology, had worked there since 1927, seeking pharmaceutical remedies for bacterial infections. He was part of a school of thought that believed chemical dies could be attached to other molecules, and thus used to target bacteria inside the body.

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