born June 18, 1845, Paris, France died May 18, 1922, Paris Laveran in full Charles-Louis-Alphonse Laveran French physician, pathologist, and parasitologist who discovered the parasite that causes human malaria. For this and later work on protozoal diseases he received the Nobel Prize for Physiology or Medicine in 1907. Educated at the Strasbourg faculty of medicine, he served as an army surgeon in the Franco-German War (187071) and practiced and taught military medicine until 1897, when he joined the Pasteur Institute, Paris. While serving as a military surgeon in Algeria in 1880, Laveran discovered the cause of malaria in the course of the autopsies he conducted on malaria victims. He found the causative organism to be a protozoan which he named Oscillaria malariae, though it was later renamed Plasmodium. Laveran was a powerful influence in developing research in tropical medicine, carrying on fruitful work in trypanosomiasis, leishmaniasis, and other protozoal diseases, as well as his epochal work in malaria. He established the Laboratory of Tropical Diseases at the Pasteur Institute (1907) and founded the Socit de Pathologie Exotique (1908). Laveran's extensive writings include Trypanosomes et trypanosomiasis (with Flix Masnil; 1904); Trait des fivres palustres avec la description des microbes du paludisme (1884); and Trait des maladies et pidmies des armes (1875).
LAVERAN, ALPHONSE
Meaning of LAVERAN, ALPHONSE in English
Britannica English vocabulary. Английский словарь Британика. 2012