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Topic: Johannes Andreas Grib Fibiger


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In the News (Tue 7 Jul 09)

  
  FIBIGER, Johannes Andreas Grib
Fibiger was appointed professor of pathological anatomy at the University of Copenhagen and director of the Institute of Pathological Anatomy in 1900, where he spent the rest of his career.
Fibiger's early research was on the bacteriology of
Fibiger was awarded the 1926 Nobel Prize in physiology or medicine for “his discovery of the Spiroptera carcinoma.”
www.history.com /encyclopedia.do?articleId=209210   (620 words)

  
  Johannes Andreas Grib Fibiger Summary
Johannes Andreas Grib Fibiger was born on April 23, 1867, in the Danish village of Silkeborg.
Johannes Andreas Grib Fibiger (1867-1928), Danish physician, pathologist, and bacteriologist, was awarded the 1926 Nobel Prize in physiology or medicine for his research on the etiology of cancer and for his discovery of a parasite that he claimed was the cause of cancer.
Johannes Andreas Grib Fibiger was born in Silkeborg, Denmark.
www.bookrags.com /Johannes_Andreas_Grib_Fibiger   (5555 words)

  
 CalendarHome.com - - Calendar Encyclopedia   (Site not responding. Last check: )
Johannes Andreas Grib Fibiger (April 23, 1867 Silkeborg - January 30, 1928 Copenhagen) was a Danish scientist who won the 1926 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine.
Fibiger had claimed to find an organism he called Spiroptera carcinoma that caused cancer in mice and rats.
Fibiger became a medical doctor in 1890 and studied under Robert Koch and Emil Adolf von Behring in Berlin.
encyclopedia.calendarhome.com /cgi-bin/encyclopedia.pl?p=Johannes_Andreas_Grib_Fibiger   (303 words)

  
 JOHANNES ANDREAS GRIB FIBIGER
Johannes Fibiger was born at Silkeborg on April 23, 1867 and died at Copenhagen on January 30, 1928 because of cardiac failure with multiple emboli and massive pulmonary infarcts; colon cancer.
Fibiger gained his bachelors degree in 1883 and qualified as a doctor in 1890.
Though Fibiger is recognized for numerous achievements and research but his most impressive achievement was when he received the Nobel Prize in 1926 for his work on cancer, his discovery of the Spiroptera carcinoma.
www.geocities.com /bio_info_fibiger   (103 words)

  
 Johannes Andreas Grib Fibiger - Definition, explanation
Johannes Andreas Grib Fibiger (April 23, 1867 - January 30, 1928) was a Danish scientist who won the 1926 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine.
Fibiger had claimed to find an organism he called Spiroptera carcinoma that caused cancer in mice and rats.
Later, it was shown that this specific organism was not the primary cause of the tumors.
www.calsky.com /lexikon/en/txt/j/jo/johannes_andreas_grib_fibiger.php   (277 words)

  
 Fibiger.NET - Johannes Fibiger
Johannes Andreas Grib Fibiger was born at Silkeborg (Denmark) on April 23, 1867.
Fibiger fulfilled a large number of official missions and took part in the direction of numerous institutions.
Fibiger died on January 30, 1928, at Copenhagen after a short illness (cardiac failure with multiple emboli and massive pulmonary infarcts; cancer of the colon: caecostomy), survived by his wife Mathilde, née Fibiger, whom he married in 1894.
www.fibiger.net /e-johannesfibiger.html   (278 words)

  
 Johannes Andreas Grib Fibiger (www.whonamedit.com)
The Danish pathologist Johannes Andreas Grib Fibiger in 1927 received the Nobel Prize for Physiology or Medicine for 1926 “for his discovery of the Spiroptera carcinoma.” Fibiger had achieved the first controlled induction of cancer in laboratory animals, a development of profound importance to cancer research.
Fibiger was born on Jutland, the son of a physician, and went to Copenhagen where he completed his medical studies and obtained his doctorate in 1890.
Fibiger’s work immediately led the Japanese pathologist Yamagiwa Katusaburo to produce cancer in laboratory animals by painting their skins with coal-tar derivates, a procedure soon adopted by Fibiger himself.
www.whonamedit.com /doctor.cfm/1443.html   (492 words)

  
 Johannes Andreas Grib Fibiger   (Site not responding. Last check: )
Johannes Andreas Grib Fibiger (April 23, 1867 - January 30, 1928) was a Danish scientist who won the 1926 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine.
Fibiger had claimed to find an organism he called Spiroptera carcinoma that caused cancer in mice and rats.
He discovered that these tumors were associated with parasitic nematode worms that had been living in some cockroaches that the rats had eaten.
www.casimiro.com /wiki/en/wikipedia/j/jo/johannes_andreas_grib_fibiger.html   (269 words)

  
 Reference.com/Encyclopedia/Johannes Andreas Grib Fibiger
Johannes Andreas Grib Fibiger (April 23, 1867 Silkeborg - January 30, 1928 Copenhagen) was a Danish scientist who won the 1926 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine.
Although the specific link between the parasites and cancer was later known to be relatively unimportant, the idea that tissue damage was a cause of cancer was still an important advance in cancer research.
Fibiger became a medical doctor in 1890 and studied under Robert Koch and Emil Adolf von Behring in Berlin.
www.reference.com /browse/wiki/Johannes_Andreas_Grib_Fibiger   (314 words)

  
 Fibiger.NET - Johannes Fibiger
Johannes Fibiger (JF) er født i Silkeborg 23.
Når han nåede at få 16 indstillinger gennem 6 år, inden han fik prisen, skyldtes det dog ikke, at komiteen med datidens viden havde saglig grund til at betvivle hans resultater - selvom de muligvis var forkerte - men udelukkende at man var i tvivl, om arbejdet var originalt nok.
Johannes Fibigers Nobel lecture (PDF) - 1,2 Mb Adobe Acrobat Reader er et gratis program, som du kan bruge til at få vist og udskrive PDF-filer Adobe Portable Document Format.
www.fibiger.net /fibiger-johannes.html   (470 words)

  
 HotBot Web Search for grib
GRIB is a WMO code form used by operational meteorological centres for...
GRIB (GRIdded Binary) is a mathematically concise data format commonly used in meteorology to store historical and forecasted weather data.
If you choose to continue with the use of your current browser however, all of our content will continue to be accessible to all versions of every browser.
www.hotbot.com /?ps=null&loc=searchbox&tab=web&provKey=Inktomi&query=grib&first=40&page=more   (319 words)

  
 Københavns Universitet
Fibiger troede, han her havde fundet smittekilden til kræft.
Fibiger modtog som den første kræftforsker Nobelprisen i medicin for 1926.
Selvom Fibigers resultater i eftertiden er modbevist, har hans forskning været et vigtigt led frem mod det, der i dag er moderne kræftforskning.
www.ku.dk /velkommen/historie_og_baggrund/nobel/johannes_fibiger.htm   (192 words)

  
 Definition of Johannes Andreas Grib Fibiger
Johannes Andreas Grib Fibiger (April 23, 1867 - January 30, 1928) was a Danish scientist who won the 1926 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine.
Fibiger had claimed to find an organism he called Spiroptera carcinoma that caused cancer in mice and rats.
He discovered that these tumors were associated with parasitic nematode worms that had been living in some cockroaches that the rats had eaten.
www.wordiq.com /definition/Johannes_Andreas_Grib_Fibiger   (328 words)

  
 Microbe Magazine
This year sees the 90th anniversary of a historic publication by Johannes Fibiger who, according to traditional ridicule, received a Nobel Prize for the clearly erroneous notion that nematodes cause malignant tumors.
In 1926, the Nobel Prize was awarded to a man named Fibiger for ‘proving’ that cancer was caused by certain small worms.” Beck then leaves his readers to chuckle at the man's naivety.
By revealing this sequence of events in 1913, Johannes Fibiger showed why the tumors he had discovered were so rare: they appeared only when rats ingested the parasite as larvae—and even then not with predictable certainty.
www.asm.org /news/index.asp?bid=21168   (1227 words)

  
 Johannes Fibiger - Biography
Fibiger gained his bachelor's degree in 1883 and qualified as a doctor in 1890.
Fibiger fulfilled a large number of official missions and took part in the direction of numerous institutions.
Fibiger died on January 30, 1928, at Copenhagen after a short illness (cardiac failure with multiple emboli and massive pulmonary infarcts; cancer of the colon: caecostomy), survived by his wife Mathilde, née Fibiger, whom he married in 1894.
www.nobel.se /medicine/laureates/1926/fibiger-bio.html   (314 words)

  
 Contenido Home
Fibiger was a student of Robert Koch and von Behring, two investigators who had previously received the Nobel award.
Continuing with this line of investigation, Fibiger induced gastric tumors in mice by feeding them with infected cockroaches.
Fibiger was the first investigator to induce controlled cancer in laboratory animals.
www.antioxidantes.com.ar /Art059.htm   (709 words)

  
 Johannes Fibiger
Later research has shown that Fibiger was mistaken -- a deficiency of Vitamin A caused the cancers in some of Fibiger's rats.
Fibiger was, however, the first scientist to induce cancer in lab animals, which was an meaningful advance in cancer research.
He married his cousin, Mathilde Fibiger, who was related closely enough to her husband that her maiden name was also Fibiger.
www.nndb.com /people/172/000126791   (236 words)

  
 Figiber, Johannes Andreas Grib   (Site not responding. Last check: )
He received his doctorate of the University of Copenhagen in 1895, and was subsequently appointed prosector at the University's Institute of Pathological Anatomy (1897-1900), Principal of the Laboratory of Clinical Bacteriology of the Army (1890-1905), and (in 1905) Director of the Central Laboratory of the Army and Consultant Physician to the Army Medical Service.
Fibiger fulfilled a large number of official missions and took part in the direction of numerous institutions.
Fibiger died on January 30, 1928, at Copenhagen after a short illness (cardiac failure with multiple emboli and massive pulmonary infarcts; cancer of the colon: caecostomy), survived by his wife Mathilde, née Fibiger, whom he married in 1894.
www.cartage.org.lb /en/themes/Biographies/MainBiographies/F/Figiber/Figiber.htm   (246 words)

  
 Johannes Fibiger – Københavns Universitet
Den danske læge, patolog og bakteriolog Johannes Andreas Grib Fibiger (1867-1928) fik i 1926 nobelprisen i medicin for sin forskning i cancerens opståen og for sin opdagelse af en parasit, som han hævdede var årsagen til cancer.
Fibiger koncentrerede sig herefter fuldstændigt om sin kræftforskning, og i 1913 var han i stand til regelmæssigt at fremprovokere svulster i mus og rotter ved hjælp af kakerlakker inficeret med parasitten, som han gav til sine forsøgsdyr.
Men Fibigers arbejde repræsenterer ikke desto mindre et vigtigt kapitel i udvikling af nye metoder og tænkemåder inden for onkologien.
sund.ku.dk /nobelpristagere/johs__fibirger   (235 words)

  
 Johannes Andreas Grib Fibiger Winner of the 1926 Nobel Prize in Medicine
Johannes Andreas Grib Fibiger Winner of the 1926 Nobel Prize in Medicine
JOHANNES ANDREAS GRIB FIBIGER Photo and BIO (submitted by Daniel)
Johannes Fibiger - Biography (submitted by Davis Brown)
www.almaz.com /nobel/medicine/1926a.html   (61 words)

  
 Fibiger, Johannes Andreas Grib - MSN Encarta
Fibiger, Johannes Andreas Grib (1867-1928), Danish bacteriologist and Nobel Prize winner whose research into stomach cancer in rats helped propel the...
Find more about Fibiger, Johannes Andreas Grib from
Is the Ivy League worth it?: A value-added analysis
encarta.msn.com /encyclopedia_761582651/Fibiger_Johannes_Andreas_Grib.html   (72 words)

  
 Amazon.com: Fibiger   (Site not responding. Last check: )
The Danish cancer researcher Johannes Fibiger,: Professor in the University of Copenhagen, by Knud Iver Assens Secher (Unknown Binding - 1947)
Johannes Fibiger: Gongylonema and vitamin A in carcinogenesis (Acta pathologica et microbiologica Scandinavica, section A : Supplement) by J Clemmesen (Unknown Binding - 1978)
Den n²dvendige nedtur: Besyv om Mathilde Fibiger og kvindernes gamle sag by Lise S²rensen (Unknown Binding - 1977)
www.amazon.com /s?ie=UTF8&keywords=Fibiger&index=blended&page=1   (432 words)

  
 The controlled clinical trial turns 100 years: Fibiger's trial of serum treatment of diphtheria -- Hróbjartsson ...
Fibiger's trial was published in Danish and its method of randomisation has often been quoted incorrectly.
Johannes A G Fibiger (1867-1928) was born in Silkeborg, Denmark (figure).
Fibiger was aware of the uncertainty of clinical judgment and explicitly defined some of the clinical outcomes.
bmj.bmjjournals.com /cgi/content/full/317/7167/1243   (2123 words)

  
 Fibiger J (1898). Biography   (Site not responding. Last check: )
Cite as: Fibiger A. Fibiger: slægtens ældste, hoftrompeterens gren, hofviolonens gren, stadsmusikantens gren.
Johannes Andreas Grib Fibiger born in Silkeborg April 23, 1867, died January 31, 1928, buried Garnison's cemetery, Copenhagen, in major-general Jac.
August 1, 1894 married to MATHILDE FIBIGER, born January 20, 1863.
www.jameslindlibrary.org /trial_records/19th_Century/fibiger/fibiger_biog.html   (159 words)

  
 ScienceWeek Message Board   (Site not responding. Last check: )
By now I have recovered the information about the other undeserved Nobel Prize that I had mentioned in my post of a few days ago.
Fibiger won a Nobel Prize in 1926Johannes Andreas Grib Fibiger (April 23, 1867 - January 30, 1928) was a Danish scientist who won the 1926 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine.
[edit] Research While studying tuberculosis in lab rats, Fibiger found tumors in some of his rats.
scienceweek.com /swbb/messages/bb103.htm   (276 words)

  
 Amazon.com: GRIB: Books   (Site not responding. Last check: )
Chajnyj grib by A. Korzunova (Hardcover - 2005)
Nonlocality in Quantum Physics by Andrey Anatoljevich Grib and Waldyr Alves Rodrigues Jr.
grib edovclub.ru, in Russian; Voronezhskaya ul 2A; admission 1100-200; M Ligovsky...
www.amazon.com /s?ie=UTF8&keywords=GRIB&index=books&page=1   (727 words)

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