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Alexander Fleming: Penicillin
built 502 days ago
Alexander Fleming is alongside the likes of Edward Jenner, Robert Koch, Christian Barnard and Louis Pasteur in medical history. Alexander Fleming discovered what was to be one of the most powerful of all antibiotics – penicillin. This drug was to change the way disease was treated and cement Fleming’s name in history.
Alexander Fleming is one of the most famous scientifists in the world, due to its discovery of penicillin. Penicillin was the first antibiotic used in great amounts to treat bacterial infections, saving millions of lifes.
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In 1928, bacteriologist Alexander Fleming made a chance discovery from an already discarded, contaminated Petri dish. The mold that had contaminated the experiment turned out to contain a powerful antibiotic, penicillin. However, though Fleming was credited with the discovery, it was over a decade before someone else turned penicillin into the miracle drug for the 20th century.
Penicillin was discovered by Alexander Fleming in a small, musty, dusty laboratory at St Mary's Hospital in 1928. This discovery revolutionised medicine and there are very few people whose lives have not benefited from it. The laboratory has now been restored to its cramped condition in 1928 when a petri dish of bacteria became contaminated by a mysterious mould with momentous consequences for the health of mankind.
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Alexander Fleming will always be remembered for turning a laboratory mishap into one of the great medical discoveries of the twentieth century. His discovery of penicillin in 1928 laid the foundation for modern antibiotic therapy and earned him a share of the 1945 Nobel Prize in physiology or medicine.
Alexander Fleming Laboratory Museum Discover for yourself the secrets of the laboratory in which Alexander Fleming discovered penicillin in 1928. An in-situ reconstruction of the laboratory, displays and a video uncover the remarkable story of how a chance discovery became a lifesaving drug destined to revolutionise medicine. The extensive archives of St Mary's Hospital are ... open for research.
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