eprintid: 2066
rev_number: 9
eprint_status: archive
userid: 111
dir: disk0/00/00/20/66
datestamp: 2006-06-21 12:00:00
lastmod: 2015-07-23 09:33:20
status_changed: 2008-01-09 13:35:20
type: book
metadata_visibility: show
title: Peptic ulcer: rise and fall
ispublished: pub
subjects: 9155
note: The transcript of a Witness Seminar held at the
Wellcome Institute for the History of Medicine,
London, on 12 May 2000
abstract: In May 2000, a distinguished group of scientists and clinicians came together in a one-day meeting to discuss the recent history of peptic ulcer, and its rise and fall. Chaired by Professor Roy Pounder from the Royal Free Hospital, witnesses described their personal experiences, and events that have affected the understanding, diagnosis and treatment of peptic ulcer through the twentieth century. This volume includes an account by Nobel Prize Winner, Sir James Black, of the introduction in the 1970s of the H2 receptor antagonists which added a new dimension to treatment of peptic ulcer disease, and also considers the discovery by Barry Marshall and colleagues of Helicobacter pylori as a causative factor in duodenal and gastric ulcers, which opened up new opportunities in the management of gastrointestinal disorders. Aetiology, therapeutic clinical trials, surgical procedures and advances in gastrointestinal endoscopy are also discussed. Among those who contributed were: Dr John Atherton, Dr Hugh Baron, Sir James Black, Dr Joseph N Blau, Sir Christopher Booth, Mr Roger Celestin, the late Dr Nelson Coghill, Dr Gerard Crean, Dr Booth Danesh, Professor Graham Dockray, Sir Richard Doll, Dr Peter Down, Sir Patrick Forrest, Professor Stewart Goodwin, Dr Jean Guy, Professor Michael Hobsley, Dr Peter Hunter, Dr Belinda Johnston, Professor Roger Jones, Mr Raymond Kirk, Professor Michael Langman, Professor John Lennard-Jones, Dr Robert Logan, Professor Kenneth McColl, Dr George Misiewicz, Professor Timothy Northfield, Professor Colm Ó’Moráin, Dr John Paulley, Professor Robert Steiner, Mr Frank Tovey, Dr David Tyrrell and Dr John Wood.
date: 2002
date_type: published
publisher: Wellcome Trust Centre for the History of Medicine at UCL
official_url: http://www.ucl.ac.uk/histmed/publications/wellcome_witnesses_c20th_med/vol_14
oa_status: green
language: eng
primo: open
primo_central: open_green
lyricists_name: Christie, D
lyricists_name: Tansey, E
lyricists_id: DACHR93
lyricists_id: EMTTA57
full_text_status: public
series: Wellcome Witnesses to Twentieth Century Medicine
volume: 14
number: 14
place_of_pub: London, UK
pages: 156
refereed: TRUE
isbn: 0854840842
editors_name: Christie, D.
editors_name: Tansey, E.
editors_id: DACHR93
editors_id: EMTTA57
citation:    Christie, D. and Tansey, E. (Eds).  (2002)    Peptic ulcer: rise and fall.                   Wellcome Witnesses to Twentieth Century Medicine: Vol.14.  Wellcome Trust Centre for the History of Medicine at UCL: London, UK.       Green open access   
 
document_url: https://discovery.ucl.ac.uk/id/eprint/2066/1/wit14.pdf