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Contents - IADR/AADR

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Penicillin, by the demands of World War II, was manufactured in quantity at the Department of Agriculture in<br />

Peoria, Illinois, through the deep-tank fermentation method and through the addition to the culture medium of<br />

corn steep liquor. In 1942 there was hardly enough penicillin to treat one hundred patients, but by the end of the<br />

year there was a sufficient quantity for all the Armed Forces and their allies. The first civilian patient treated in<br />

the United States was a thirty-three-year-old housewife who in 1944 became ill with sepsis due to b-hemolytic<br />

streptococcus from inevitable abortion. She recovered under penicillin therapy. By 1958 some 375 tons of<br />

penicillin were put to use. The semisynthetic penicillins, congeners of penicillin, were conceived because of the<br />

inactivation of penicillin by penicillinase-producing microbes. Methicillin, oxacillin, cloxacillin, nafcillin, and<br />

ampicillin all have a broader spectrum of antibacterial activity than penicillin.<br />

Contemporary with this brilliant work was the equally important uncovering of streptomycin. Between<br />

1939 and 1943, Selman Waksman, a soil microbiologist from Rutgers University, disclosed antibiotics in the<br />

soil actinomyces. By 1944 he and his associates 10 had isolated streptomycin and found it effective against<br />

brucellosis, Listeria infections, and Shigella and Escherichia coli infections. So effective was it against the<br />

tubercle bacillus that the morbidity and mortality of the dreaded tuberculosis fell appreciably, tuberculosis<br />

sanitariums were less needed, and tuberculosis was treated in the clinic and the office. An array of potent drugs<br />

flowed from laboratories studying soil bacteria: bacitracin, chloramphenicol, polymyxin, chlortetracycline,<br />

cephalosporin, neomycin, oxytetracycline, nystatin, erythromycin, tetracycline, novobiocin, cycloserine,<br />

vancomycin, ristocetin, kanamycin, griseofulvin, and lincocin. Ehrlich's magic bullets had indeed been brought<br />

forth. The death rate from infection and parasites in England and Wales was reduced from 1600 per million<br />

living to 180 per million living in 1957. The years 1920 to 1970 were, indeed, years of the conquest of bacterial<br />

disease.<br />

ORAL CONTRACEPTION<br />

Two active substances in the ovary were defined in the 1920s: the one, estrogen, varying in amounts<br />

during menstruation and pregnancy, and the other, progesterone, present in the corpus luteum. The folliclestimulating<br />

hormone and the lutein hormone were traced to the pituitary. Diethylstilbestrol was one of the<br />

several estrogens used for menopause, dysmenorrhea, ovarian dysgenesis, osteoporosis, and cancer of the<br />

prostate. Recognition of the use of progestin for the inhibition of ovulation led to the discovery of an effective<br />

oral contraceptive agent. In 1955 Rock, Pincus, and Garcia 11 gave the combination of norethylnodrel with<br />

mestranol to large numbers of women in San Juan and Humacao, Puerto Rico, and in Port-au-Prince, Haiti,<br />

giving the drug from the fifth to the twenty-fifth day of the menstrual cycle. The rate of pregnancy was<br />

appreciably reduced. What a boon to womanhood!<br />

Primary hypertension affected 5 percent of the population. Although its pathogenesis has not been well<br />

INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR DENTAL RESEARCH (<strong>IADR</strong>) – THE FIRST FIFTY YEAR HISTORY PAGE 13

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