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George H. Whipple. Premio Nobel en Fisiología y Medicina en 1934. La enfermedad de Whipple, la anemia perniciosa y otras contribuciones a la medicina
Journal
Gaceta Médica de México
ISSN
00163813
Date Issued
2002-07
Type
Resource Types::text::journal::journal article
Abstract
George Hoyot Whipple (1878-1976) was awarded the Nobel Prize in Physiology and Medicine in 1934, along with Minot and Murphy for their studies in pernicious anemia. Whipple's name has been given to the bacterial disease which he describes in 1907 that we know today as Whipple's disease or intestinal lipodystrophy. He gave the name of thalasemia to the Mediterranean anemia of Cooley, and made diverse contributions to hematology and general pathology. He worked with William Welch in the Department of Pathology at Johns Hopkins Hospital and later became director of the University of Rochester. He died in 1976 at the age of 98.© Gaceta Medica de México
Subjects