Word: influenza
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1950-1959
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...illnesses during pregnancy and the health of her baby, but medical researchers were long unable to prove anything except the damaging effects of German measles in the first three months of gestation (TIME, Dec. 31, 1956). Then came the 1957 midsummer warning that an epidemic of Asian influenza was imminent, and physicians braced themselves for a test. Last week, in the London medical journal Lancet, two Irish investigators reported that Asian flu is a potent cause of fetal abnormalities, many of them fatal...
Died. Carlos Saavedra Lamas, 80, aristocratic, stiff-collared Argentine diplomat, only South American to win the Nobel Peace Prize (in 1936, for his work in ending the three-year-old Chaco War between Bolivia and Paraguay); of influenza; in Buenos Aires...
Died. Georges Cardinal Grente, 86, one of France's eight cardinals, member of the French Academy, author (The Life and Passion of Jeanne d'Arc), worker in the French Resistance movement in World War II; of influenza; in Le Mans, France, where he served as archbishop...
...Samuel Bogoch, Assistant in Psychiatry, has succeeded in injecting brain ganglioside, a chemical constituent isolated from the brains of mice, into living mice to absorb two kinds of influenza viruses before they can reach their normal chemical receptors in the brain...
...Injection of either of the influenza viruses into the brains of the mice," Dr. Bogoch explained, "caused convulsions and death of the animals. But when brain ganglioside was injected before, together with, or in certain cases, after the viruses were injected into the brain, the neurotoxic effects were prevented...