Octave Gengou
Octave Gengou (27 February 1875, Ouffet – 25 April 1957, Brussels) was a Belgian bacteriologist. He researched with Jules Bordet the Bordetella pertussis bacteria.
Biography
At the age of 22 he obtained his doctorate at the University of Liège, later being named as deputy director at the Pasteur Institute of Brabant. In 1945 he became professor emeritus at the University of Brussels.[1]
Gengou worked at the Belgium Pasteur Institute in Brussels. With Jules Bordet in 1906 he isolated Bordetella pertussis in pure culture and declared is as the cause of whooping cough.[2] 1912 he developed the first whooping cough-vaccine. He also worked on various important fundamental research on a now common test for diseases (e.g. the "Wassermann test" of August von Wassermann).
He served as secretary general of the Oeuvre Nationale Belge contre la Tuberculose and as an honorary president of the Ligue nationale belge contre la Tuberculose.[1]
Published works
With Jules Bordet, he collaborated on the following works:
- Contribution à l'étude de la coagulation du sang, 1903 – Contribution to the study of blood coagulation.
- Le Microbe de la coqueluche, 1906 – The microbe "pertussis".
- Note complémentaire sur le microbe de la coqueluche, 1906 – Additional notes on the microbe "pertussis".
- L'Endotoxine coquelucheuse, 1909 – The pertussis endotoxin.
- Etiologie de la coqueluche. Etat actuel de la question, 1909 – Etiology of pertussis. Current status of the question.
- La Coagglutination des globules rouges par les mélanges des anticorps et des antigènes albumineux, 1911 – Coagglutination of red blood cells by mixtures of albumin antibodies and antigens.
- Le Diagnostic de la coqueluche fruste par la méthode de la fixation d'alexine, 1911.[3]
See also
References
- 1 2 ARMB; Royal Academy of Medicine of Belgium biographical information
- ↑ Archives de l'Institut Pasteur biography of Jules Bordet
- ↑ IDREF.fr bibliography
External links
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