Edoardo Perroncito

Edoardo Perroncito

Edoardo Bellarmino Perroncito (10 March 1847, Viale in the Province of Asti – 4 November 1936) was an Italian parasitologist. He was the father of pathologist Aldo Perroncito (1882–1929).

He earned his degree in veterinary medicine, and in 1879 he became a professor of parasitology to the Faculty of Veterinary Medicine at the University of Turin.[1]

Remembered for his extensive research of Ancylostoma duodenale (hookworm), in 1880 he determined that hookworm was the cause of anemia being suffered by workmen building the St. Gotthard railway tunnel.[2][3] He was the first to recommend using an extract of the male fern as a remedy for the disease.[4][5]

Selected writings

References

  1. Statement based on a translation from an equivalent article at the Italian Wikipedia
  2. Antimicrobial Drugs: Chronicle of a twentieth century medical triumph by David Greenwood
  3. Stanford.edu Hookworm: Ancylostoma duodenale and Necator americanus
  4. Who Goes First?: The Story of Self-Experimentation in Medicine by Lawrence K. Altman
  5. Treccani.it (biographical information)
  6. WorldCat Titles (publications)
  7. IPNI.  Perronc.

External links

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