Author:
Saha Pabitra,Chaudhury Abhijit,Maji Ardhendu Kumar
Abstract
Kala-azar or visceral leishmaniasis was at one time a scourge in the Bengal Presidency of British India comprising the present Indian states of Bengal, Bihar, Assam, and Odisha. The disease was rampant along the Ganga and Brahmaputra River adjoining areas. In the early 1900s, the treatment initiated was by the intravenous injection of tartar emetic, which had a narrow safety level and long-term use was marked with multiple side effects. In 1920, Upendranath Brahmachari discovered urea stibamine, which is the urea salt of para-amino phenyl stibnic acid and it revolutionized the treatment of Kala-azar with >90% cure rate and with minimal side effects. He is also credited with the description of post-kala-azar dermal leishmaniasis. He was conferred the knighthood of the British Empire as recognition of his important contribution. Although his name was twice nominated for Nobel Prize, unfortunately, he never received it.
Reference3 articles.
1. Further notes on Leishman's bodies;Ross;Br Med J,1939
2. Preparation of stable colloidal antimony;Brahmachari;Lancet,1916
3. A new form of cutaneaous leishmaniosis – Dermal leishmonoid;Brahmachari;Ind Med Gaz,1922
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