• Thumbnail for Edwin Klebs
    diphtheria, which was called Klebs–Loeffler bacterium (now Corynebacterium diphtheriae). He was the father of physician Arnold Klebs. Klebs was born in Königsberg...
    12 KB (1,226 words) - 13:55, 27 February 2024
  • Thumbnail for Corynebacterium diphtheriae
    diphtheria. It is also known as the Klebs–Löffler bacillus because it was discovered in 1884 by German bacteriologists Edwin Klebs (1834–1912) and Friedrich Löffler...
    23 KB (2,656 words) - 00:15, 23 August 2024
  • Thumbnail for Klebsiella pneumoniae
    3-hydroxybutyrate. The genus Klebsiella was named after the German microbiologist Edwin Klebs (1834–1913).[citation needed] It is also known as Friedlander's bacillum...
    42 KB (4,195 words) - 12:11, 8 May 2024
  • Klebs is a German surname. Notable people with the surname include: Arnold Klebs (1870–1943), Swiss microbiologist and physician; son of Edwin Klebs Edwin...
    749 bytes (135 words) - 07:33, 4 December 2020
  • Thumbnail for Klebsiella
    polysaccharide-based capsule. Klebsiella is named after German-Swiss microbiologist Edwin Klebs (1834–1913). Carl Friedlander described Klebsiella bacillus which is...
    17 KB (1,718 words) - 14:23, 7 July 2024
  • Thumbnail for Diphtheria
    1883, Edwin Klebs identified the bacterium causing diphtheria, and named it Klebs–Loeffler bacterium. The club shape of this bacterium helped Edwin to differentiate...
    55 KB (5,621 words) - 10:29, 17 September 2024
  • "Pseudohermaphroditimus" (pseudohermaphroditism) was coined in German by Edwin Klebs in 1876. Klebs had included the term as a synonym for the earlier coined, "spurious...
    15 KB (1,439 words) - 21:41, 12 September 2024
  • Thumbnail for Histology
    In the same year, Canada balsam appeared on the scene, and in 1869 Edwin Klebs (1834-1913) reported that he had for some years embedded his specimens...
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  • Thumbnail for Typhoid fever
    disease. In April 1880, three months prior to Eberth's publication, Edwin Klebs described short and filamentous bacilli in the Peyer's patches in typhoid...
    96 KB (10,677 words) - 02:17, 28 September 2024
  • Thumbnail for Pneumonia
    of medical knowledge through the Middle Ages into the 19th century. Edwin Klebs was the first to observe bacteria in the airways of persons having died...
    120 KB (12,708 words) - 05:09, 18 September 2024
  • Thumbnail for Rudolf Virchow
    2008.07323.x. ISSN 1365-2141. PMID 18783400. S2CID 33756942. Rines, George Edwin, ed. (1920). "Virchow, Rudolf" . Encyclopedia Americana. Taylor, R; Rieger...
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  • Pattatucci Aragon stated, Eugenides opines that the 1876 system devised by Edwin Klebs that used gonad tissue to determine sex provides the most accurate answer...
    130 KB (13,877 words) - 20:42, 24 September 2024
  • Thumbnail for Arnold Klebs
    bacteriologist Edwin Klebs, was raised in the presence of an extensive array of scientists, artists, and historians. In his teenage years, Klebs was one of...
    4 KB (386 words) - 19:21, 12 October 2023
  • Kitasatospora – Shibasaburo Kitasato, a Japanese bacteriologist Klebsiella – Edwin Klebs, a German bacteriologist Klugiella – Michael J. Klug, an American...
    27 KB (2,699 words) - 14:40, 18 March 2024
  • Thumbnail for Androgen insensitivity syndrome
    determined the "perceived" sex of an individual. German-Swiss pathologist Edwin Klebs is sometimes noted for using the word "pseudohermaphroditism" in his...
    128 KB (12,638 words) - 22:10, 6 September 2024
  • (d. 1906) 1833 – J. E. B. Stuart, American general (d. 1864) 1834 – Edwin Klebs, German-Swiss pathologist and academic (d. 1913) 1834 – Ema Pukšec, Croatian-German...
    61 KB (5,948 words) - 19:48, 30 August 2024
  • was established in 1873 by Bernhard Naunyn, Oswald Schmiedeberg, and Edwin Klebs. It is the official journal of the German Society of Experimental and...
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  • Thumbnail for George Miller Sternberg
    Plasmodium malariae by Alphonse Laveran, and of Bacillus malariae by Edwin Klebs and Corrado Tommasi-Crudeli. His report (1881) declared that the Bacillus...
    22 KB (2,720 words) - 20:54, 22 September 2023
  • pathologist, controversial advocate of euthanasia. Theodor Albrecht Edwin Klebs (1834–1913), German-Swiss pathologist. Julius von Kossa 19th-century...
    21 KB (2,188 words) - 22:06, 6 June 2024
  • Thumbnail for List of German inventions and discoveries
    pathogenic bacterium Corynebacterium diphtheriae which causes diphtheria, by Edwin Klebs and Friedrich Löffler 1884: Koch's postulates by Robert Koch and Friedrich...
    230 KB (19,850 words) - 02:48, 27 August 2024
  • Thumbnail for Plasmodium falciparum
    mainly because by that time, leading physicians such as Theodor Albrecht Edwin Klebs and Corrado Tommasi-Crudeli claimed that they had discovered a bacterium...
    92 KB (10,392 words) - 11:34, 4 September 2024
  • Thumbnail for Charles Louis Alphonse Laveran
    mainly because by that time leading physicians such as Theodor Albrecht Edwin Klebs and Corrado Tommasi-Crudeli claimed that they had discovered a bacterium...
    31 KB (3,288 words) - 10:10, 25 September 2024
  • Thumbnail for 1834
    1900) January 25 – Alina Frasa, Finnish ballerina (d. 1899) February 6 – Edwin Klebs, German-Swiss pathologist who discovered Diphtheria (d. 1913) February...
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  • pneumonia in 1882. He also first described thromboangiitis obliterans. Edwin Klebs had seen bacteria in the airways of individuals who died from pneumonia...
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  • Thumbnail for Oswald Schmiedeberg
    books and articles and with pathologists Bernhard Naunyn (1839–1925) and Edwin Klebs (1834–1913), he co-founded the journal Naunyn-Schmiedeberg's Archives...
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  • Thumbnail for Kamera lens
    1773. William Saville Kent placed it in the genus Heteromita in 1880. Edwin Klebs moved it to Bodo in 1892, but this was rejected by H.M. Woodcock, who...
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  • Thumbnail for October 1913
    administrated within the County of Robinson, South Australia, Australia. Died: Edwin Klebs, 79. Prussian-Swiss medical researcher who identified the bacteria that...
    75 KB (8,709 words) - 21:02, 1 October 2024
  • Thumbnail for Friedrich Berthold Reinke
    Pathology Institute of the University of Zurich. There, he studied under Edwin Klebs. Reinke developed a collegial relationship with Otto Lubarsch, who at...
    19 KB (1,423 words) - 16:10, 2 April 2024
  • Thumbnail for Corrado Tommasi-Crudeli
    in Rome. He was elected to Italian Senate during 1892–1893. He, with Edwin Klebs, discovered that typhoid and diphtheria were caused by bacteria. However...
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  • Thumbnail for Ernst Ziegler (pathologist)
    doctorate at Bern in 1872. Afterwards, he served as an assistant to Edwin Klebs in Würzburg, and in 1878 he became an associate professor at the University...
    3 KB (202 words) - 16:11, 20 July 2023