BrainImmune

ADVANCING NEUROENDOCRINE–IMMUNOLOGY RESEARCH

 

 

 

 

Sat05252013

History

Bridging Neurosciences and Immunology - An Overview

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Bernard and Pasteur

The brain and the immune system, or the “supersystems”, a term coined by Tada (1997), are the two major adaptive systems of the body.

Bartolomeo Eustachius and the Discovery of Adrenal Glands

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Bartolomeo Eustachius

Bartolomeo Eustachio was born in 1524 in San Severino Marche, a little town situated in the center of Italy and belonging at that time to the Papal States.

Caleb Parry and the Relationship Between Hyperthyroidism and Stress

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* Portrait of Caleb Hillier ParryThe disease that we commonly call Graves’ disease, or Basedow’s disease in part of Europe, was actually described by Caleb Parry many years before Graves’ published a description of hyperthyroidism and ophthalmopathy.

Claude Bernard (1813 – 1878), the Father of Modern Physiology and Experimental Medicine

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Claude Bernard

Claude Bernard was born on 12 July 1813 in the village of Saint-Julien, in France’s Beaujolais region.

Disease-Environment Interactions: Another Contribution of Louis Pasteur, 1878

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Louis Pasteur

Threats of bioterrorism have renewed interest in learning more about all aspects of anthrax, particularly its deadly spores. In 1878, Louis Pasteur conducted a famous experiment on the virulence of anthrax bacilli.

The Discovery of Adrenaline

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Sir Edward Albert Sharpey-Schafer

The first practical discovery of adrenaline by man occurred when one of our ancestral hominids while out for a stroll was unexpectedly surprised by a sabre-toothed tiger.

The Genesis of the Concept of Chemical Neurotransmission

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Sir Henry Hallett Dale

Although the first suggestion that a chemical transmitter might be involved with synaptic events was made by the legendary physiologist Emil du Bois-Reymond in the late 1850’s, the development of the concept of chemical synaptic transmission probably began in 1901 by John Newport Langley.

Walter Cannon: Homeostasis, the Fight-or-Flight Response, the Sympathoadrenal System, and the Wisdom of the Body

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Walter Cannon

Scientific integrative medicine finds its roots in the seemingly simple but actually enormously difficult issue of how higher organisms maintain their integrity despite the vicissitudes of life.

Mental State and Tuberculosis - Tohru Ishigami, 1918

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Face page of the publication by Tohru Ishigami in 1919

Tohru Ishigami was born in 1857, in the midst of a tempestuous period in Japanese history.

Serguei Metalnikov – 1920s – Introducing the Concept of Immune Conditioning

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* Serguei MetalnikovAny student of psychology is thoroughly familiar with Pavlov's original work on classical conditioning, which was carried out in the 1900's and established the concept of associative learning.

Phillip Hench - Cortisone and Rheumatoid Arthritis, 1948

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Philip Hench

Corticosteroids, despite their well-recognized adverse effects, are an essential component in the treatment of many types of autoimmune and other inflammatory conditions.

Hans Selye and the Birth of the Stress Concept

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As Glaciers Melt

In 1936 a half page report appeared in Nature under the title "A syndrome produced by diverse nocuous agents," which was authored by Hans Selye of McGill University, Montreal, Canada [1].

The Discovery of Interferon, the First Cytokine, by Alick Isaacs and Jean Lindenmann in 1957

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Alick Isaacs

I first met Alick Isaacs in November, 1955.

Andor Szentivanyi and the Beta Adrenergic Theory of Allergy and Asthma

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Andor Szentivanyi

Fifty six years ago Andor Szentivanyi and colleagues were the first to document with exact scientific methodology in animal experiments that the nervous system regulates anaphylactic reactions and antibody production.