Random Cerebral Expressions

Saturday, December 28, 2019

Penicillin’s first patient

From my second year dental school 1972.  I was interested in this drug and I came across this classic article written for Aster Medical Journal- July 2019. Prof: Col. Bupadikar was the teacher who introduced this topic to us, at KMC- Manipal.   

By Author: Mike Barrett is Professor of Biochemical Parasitology 

at the Wellcome Centre for Molecular Parasitology at the University of Glasgow.

The discovery of penicillin by Alexander Fleming in 1928 is often portrayed as a stroke of serendipity falling upon a sloppy worker who had left a bacterial culture plate open on his bench while taking a holiday. The fungus that landed there killed the bacteria - and the lucky Fleming could claim to have saved the world.

It was no simple fluke. The Scottish doctor had, in fact, been leading research into the quest for antimicrobial agents for many years by this time. Fleming, however, failed to develop the drug, finding it too difficult to purify. This was left to Howard Florey, Ernst Chain and Norman Heatley in Oxford  over a decade later - work catalysed by the necessity of war.

The first patient to be treated with penicillin was a policeman, Constable Albert Alexander. According to popular legend, Alexander developed sepsis after pricking himself while pruning roses in the garden of the police house in the pretty hamlet of Wootton in Oxfordshire in the early autumn of 1940.

By the time the researchers felt they could test penicillin in humans – having cured infections in mice and proven its safety in a terminally ill human volunteer - Alexander was deteriorating fast. Now in the Radcliffe Infirmary in Oxford, he was covered in abscesses and had already lost an eye.
He received an initial dose of 200 mg of penicillin, followed by another 300 mg every

three hours over five days. His short-term recovery was remarkable. However, the original penicillin formulation was excreted from the body so rapidly that Florey likened their task to trying to fill a bath with the plug out. It also explains the need for frequent repeat doses.

The patient's urine was collected and rushed to the penicillin production unit at the Sir William Dunn School of Pathology, where Chain desperately purified excreted drug for reuse. But he couldn't recover enough. Alexander relapsed and eventually died. His temporary reprieve, however, helped convince the penicillin team that curing him would have been possible, if only enough of the drug could have been made.

With Heatley, Florey left for the USA. There, Florey persuaded several large pharmaceutical companies (including Merck, E R Squibb& Sons, Charles Pfizer & Co. and Lederle Laboratories) to scale up production. This meant that by the end of World War II thousands of Allied soldiers were surviving battlefield wounds and being treated for sexually transmitted infections, including gonorrhoea. The work sparked the antibiotic revolution.

Recently, an elderly aunt of mine told me a story of an old friend of hers, Sheila LeBlanc.
Sheila is the daughter of Constable Alexander. What's more, she is still alive and living in California. I emailed Sheila with some questions. She explained how, when her father died in 1941.





Tuesday, December 10, 2019

Kasturba Medical College 69ers reunion-2019


Some pictures at: 
(click link for pictures)

We had been looking forward to this 50th year Golden Jubilee event at Manipal 28th -30 November, with our classmates who joined PPC in 1969. It was a superbly organized program and was attended by about 100 people with families. Many had expressed their inability to come due to distances, looking after ageing parents, or could not accommodate these dates. One of them had a grandchild too!

Much to my dislike, I could not take my motorcycle this time, as I had some stuff to carry with me. After Belur, the beauty of Western Ghats take charge and it is just gorgeous. The birds, the streams, ‘henchina’ manae with tiles roofs and the fresh air ! 

Stayed a night at Sringeri on 26th overnight at the Sharadha Peeta. The Tungabhadra river flowed majestically. Fond of Adi Shankaracharya’s commentaries on the Upanishads, I imbibed a longing feeling.  If was not for Adi Shankara, this country would have turned Buddhist.  With the ‘Shruti’s”, arose the Vedanta and his Advaita philosophy. These changed the country’s concepts and perceptions to the Hindu belief.

Manipal reunion saw a lot of friends from far and wide. A beach party, dinner at Ocean pearl, the Heritage village and then the group photograph with all of us took us home. MAHE did a great job with assisting us. The conclusion event took place at Fortune Inn, Valley View was very memorable.  Many of our teachers who taught us were present, including ‘our dean’ Dr. Krishna Rao and Director of CODS Dr. K. S. Bhat. People of our batch with outstanding achievements were recognized. 

All started well and ended well !