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Dr. Louis Pasteur |
How Louis Pasteur helped to save millions of life in the world
No one knew
what caused infections when Louis Pasteur was a boy in the early 1800s. No one
knew that germs spread disease. There were no antibiotics or other drugs. Many
people died from infections.
Pasteur
discovered that bacteria cause many diseases. He showed that bacteria get into
living things and then multiply. He proved that diseases could be cured by
stopping the spread of bacteria. This important discovery is called the germ
theory of disease. It led to antibiotics and other medicines that kill
bacteria. Pasteur’s discovery has saved the lives of many people.
How Pasteur
Helped Industry
Louis Pasteur
was born in France in 1822. He studied physics and chemistry in Paris. As a
professor of chemistry, he worked on problems that affected French industry.
The wine-making industry in France was in trouble during the mid-1800s because
much of the wine was spoiling. Pasteur discovered that germs were getting into
the wine and turning it sour. He found that heat killed these germs and
prevented the wine from spoiling. Pasteur later applied his discovery to milk.
His way of heating foods to kill bacteria is now called pasteurization.
Pasteur also
helped the French silk industry. In the mid-1800s, a disease was killing off
silkworms before they could spin silk threads. Pasteur showed that the disease
was in the silkworm eggs and that getting rid of any infected eggs could keep
the disease from spreading. Pasteur became a national hero in France for saving
the wine and silk industries.
How Pasteur
Prevented Disease
Pasteur then
discovered how to make vaccines to protect people and animals against disease.
He observed that animals infected with a disease sometimes became immune to the
disease—that is, protected from getting the disease again. Pasteur found that
he could weaken germs in his laboratory. When he put weakened germs into the
bodies of animals, the animals became immune to the disease caused by the
germs. Pasteur made a vaccine to protect sheep against a disease called
anthrax.
One of
Pasteur’s most important discoveries was a vaccine against rabies. People can
get this deadly disease if they are bitten by an animal infected with rabies.
In 1885, a mother begged Pasteur to treat her young son who had been badly
bitten by a dog with rabies. The vaccine worked, and the boy lived. Pasteur
then became an even greater national hero. In 1888, the Pasteur Institute in
Paris was founded in his honor. Pasteur became its director. He worked there
until he died in 1895.
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