Discovery of penicillin/Related Articles: Difference between revisions
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Latest revision as of 16:00, 7 August 2024
- See also changes related to Discovery of penicillin, or pages that link to Discovery of penicillin or to this page or whose text contains "Discovery of penicillin".
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- Alexander Fleming [r]: Scottish biologist and pharmacologist (1881-1955), best-known for the discovery of penicillin for which he won the Nobel Prize. [e]
- Ancient Greece [r]: The loose collection of Greek-speaking city-states centered on the Aegean Sea which flourished from the end of the Mycenaean age to the Roman conquest of Greece in 146 BC. [e]
- Penicillin [r]: A class of antibiotic drugs that have a common β-lactam core structure. [e]
- Hepcidin [r]: A peptide hormone, secreted by the liver and believed to act primarily in the duodenum, currently believed to be a major, if not the master, regulatory mechanism of human iron metabolism, and indeed in mammals [e]
- Bioavailability [r]: An objective measurement of the availability, of target tissues, of the active ingredient of a drug or nutrient administered to a living organism [e]
- Heroin [r]: An organic chemical opioid drug derived from morphine. [e]
- Lactam [r]: A cyclic amide chemical compound. Important component of many antibiotics. [e]