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Hideyo Noguchi

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Hideyo Noguchi
野口 英世
Born(1876-11-09)November 9, 1876
DiedMay 21, 1928(1928-05-21) (aged 51)
Resting placeWoodlawn Cemetery, New York City, US
Known forsyphilis
Treponema pallidum
Scientific career
Fieldsbacteriology
Japanese name
Kanji野口 英世
Hiraganaのぐち ひでよ
Transcriptions
RomanizationNoguchi Hideyo

Hideyo Noguchi (野口 英世, Noguchi Hideyo, November 9, 1876 – May 21, 1928), also known as Seisaku Noguchi (野口 清作, Noguchi Seisaku), was a prominent Japanese bacteriologist known for his work on syphilis at the Rockefeller Institute. He assisted in the diagnosis of the disease and aided in the long term understanding of neurosyphilis.[1] He was nominated several times for a Nobel prize in medicine, but did not receive the prize.[2]

Before the Rockefeller Institute, he pioneered the fields of immunology and serology at the University of Pennsylvania. In 1903, he developed one of the earliest serums to treat North American rattlesnakes bites.[3]

During his research of syphilis at the Rockefeller Institute, Noguchi discovered Treponema pallidum in the brain and spinal cord tissue of a patient suffering from neurosyphilis, which established the conclusive link between syphilis and progressive paralysis disease. His work made for the first time the connection between a mental and physical disease through demonstrating that an organic agent could cause psychosis.[4]

Later in his career, Noguchi developed an antiserum to treat Rocky Mountain spotted fever, a notoriously lethal disease before treatment was discovered.

Some of Noguchi's work posthumously has been retracted and put into doubt. His later work on yellow fever, which he believed to be caused by a bacteria, was a virus and his pure culture of syphilis could not be reproduced. Eventually, Noguchi during a trip to Africa in search for the cause of yellow fever died of the same disease.

His discoveries led him to be one of the first Japanese scientists to gain international recognition for his work. His obituary was featured in The New York Times and he granted numerous awards from foreign dignitaries.[5] He was a prolific scientist, having published over 200 papers, wrote multiple monographs, and gave lecture tours throughout Europe.[6]

Early life

[edit]

Hideyo Noguchi, whose childhood name was Seisaku Noguchi,[7] was born to a family of farmers[7] in Inawashiro, Fukushima prefecture in 1876. His father was a drunk and his mother Shika worked tirelessly in the fields, providing for her family.[8]

Hideyo Noguchi's childhood home and fireplace

When he was two years old, he was left with his grandmother with poor eyesight and hard of hearing and young Noguchi fell into an irori, a traditional Japanese sunken fireplace.[8] While in the fields, his mother heard his scream.[8] Noguchi suffered a severe burn on his left hand. There was no doctor in the small village, but one of the men examined the boy. "The fingers of the left hand are mostly gone," he said, "and the left arm, the left foot, and the right hand are burned; I don't know how badly."[9]

His mother vowed to do her best for her eldest son even with his disability.[8] In 1883, Noguchi entered Mitsuwa elementary school. Thanks to generous contributions from his teacher Kobayashi and his friends, he was able to receive surgery for his left hand fifteen years after the accident. He was able to recover about 70% functionality. Noguchi was able to win the support of the people around him over the course of his life.[8]

In 1872, Japan introduced examination for doctors. This was an attempt to modernized Japan's medical system during the Meji Restoration.[8] Although graduates of the most exclusive and elite medical university in Tokyo, Imperial University, founded in 1877, were exempt from requiring medical examination.[8]

Dr. Kanae Watanabe Clinic in Aizuwakamatsu City

Noguchi decided to become a doctor after his surgery.[8] In 1893, sixteen year old Noguchi apprenticed at Dr. Kanae Watanabe (渡部 鼎, Watanabe Kanae), the same doctor who had performed the surgery, at his clinic in Aizuwakamatsu.[8] Noguchi unable to get into the Imperial University because of his peasant background had to pass the test.[8] In 1896, he left for Tokyo as he had to receive formal training and prepare for his examination.[8] After one month he passed the written part, and in 1897, he passed the clinical examinations at twenty years old.[8] Dr. Watanabe introduced Noguchi to Chiwaki Morinosuke founder of the Takayama Dental College (precursor to the Tokyo Dental College) who took him in as an apprentice. Noguchi and Morinosuke became close friends. Eventually, Noguchi worked at the Kitasato Research. Although, Noguchi was one of the only doctor to have not graduated from the Imperial University, making him an outsider among his peers.[8]

Young Hideyo Noguchi

In 1898, Noguchi changed his first name to Hideyo after reading a novel by Japanese author Tsubouchi Shōyō about a college student whose character had the same name as him. The character in the story, Seisaku, was an intelligent medical student like Noguchi but became lazy and ruined his life.[10]

In 1899, Noguchi met Simon Flexner during his internship at the Kitasato Institute.[11] Simon Flexner was visiting Japan to see research from Japanese scientists.[12] Noguchi was his translator, being one of a few people who spoke English and Japanese, at the Kitasato Institute. Noguchi expressed his desire to work in the United States to Flexner, and Flexner gave polite words encouragement.[11]

Benefactors and patrons

[edit]

Noguchi showed signs of great talent. He had three main benefactors, Sakae Kobayashi, his elementary school teacher and father figure,[13] Kanae Watanabe, the doctor who performed surgery on his hand,[14] and his main benefactor, Morinosuke Chiwaki, who partially funded his travel to the United States.[15] In addition to that, his friend, Hajime Hoshi, who owned a succseful pharmaceutical company in Tokyo, financially support him later in his career.

Early career

[edit]

Traveling to the United States

[edit]
The ship America Maru

In 1900, Noguchi travelled to the United States on the America Maru. [16] In part, motivated by difficulties in obtaining a medical position in Japan as it required expensive schooling.[15] Noguchi experienced discrimination as employers were concerned his hand deformity would discourage patients.[15] He felt moving to the United States would find him more success.[15]

Research on snake venom

[edit]

Noguchi traveled to Philadelphia in 1901. He surprised Simon Flexner at the University of Pennsylvania begging for a job.[17] Flexner asked Noguchi, "Have you ever studied snake venom?"[17] Noguchi, not having much experience, but determination and seeing researchers in Japan work with snakes, said, "Yes, sir, I do know a little about it. I'd like the chance to learn more."[17]

On January 4, 1901, Noguchi started his research position under Flexner. He was earning about eight dollars a month, which was not enough to afford living expenses.[17] Flexner had to leave Noguchi alone for three months. Despite his lack of knowledge, Flexner returned to find him having written a 250 page paper on snake venom.[18] Flexner was impressed. He put him under the guidance of Dr. Silas Weir Mitchell.[18] Mitchell and Noguchi wrote a joint research paper in the medical journal for the University of Pennsylvania, Noguchi's first official published research paper.[18]

Both Dr. Mitchell and Noguchi presented their scientific findings before the National Academy of Science in Philadelphia, one of the greatest honors an American scientist could have at the time.[19] Dr. Mitchell spoke during their presentation and Noguchi handled the specimens.[19]

Dr. Mitchell said after their research concluded...

"It is thanks to the great efforts of this young man that I have been able to bring my thirty years of research to their final conclusion."[20]

Although, Mitchell was concerned about his acceptance into larger Western society.[18] During his work, Noguchi complained about the feeding of live rabbits to snakes in cages. He felt this practice cruel but fellow researchers said he was being too sensitive and sentimental.[21]

On July 9, 1907, the University of Pennsylvania awarded Hideyo Noguchi an honorary degree.[20] Dr. Mitchell recommended him for the Carnegie Fellowship. Noguchi became an official researcher and received funding from the Carnegie Institute and National Academy of Science.[20] German researcher Paul Ehrlich wrote to congratulate him.[22]

Statens Serum Institute in Copenhagen

Noguchi was invited to conduct research at the Statens Serum Institute in Copenhagen.[12] Noguchi brought a hundred grams of dried rattlesnake venom.[3] His research was on serology and he wrote several papers with fellow bacteriologist, Thorvald Madsen, whose friendship continued late into life and their letters have survived.[12]

French scientist Albert Calmette was the first to produce an antitoxin for venomous snake bites in 1895.[23] Dr. Mitchell had made attempts to produce a serum for rattlesnakes. He was unsuccessful but encouraged his protege.[3] Noguchi and Madsen produced one of the first successful serums and treatment against North American rattlesnakes in 1903.[3] Furthermore, Noguchi was a novel promoter of the use of antivenoms.[24] His research contributed to the major development of the first antivenom for North American rattlesnakes.[25]

Later, Noguchi released a monograph on snake venom in 1909, Snake Venoms: An Investigation of Venomous Snakes with Special Reference to the Phenomena of Their Venoms.[12] The publication contained drawings and several photographs of specimens.[26]

In the preface, it stated,

“No single work in the English language exists at this time which treats of the facts of zoological, anatomical, physiological, and pathological features of venomous snakes, with particular reference to the properties of their venoms."[26]

Career at the Rockefeller Institute

[edit]
Early Rockefeller Institute

In 1904, Noguchi after concluding his work the Staten's Institute was promised a position at the Rockefeller Institute after Simon Flexner approached him.[27] In this period of his career, a fellow research assistant was Frenchman Alexis Carrel, who would go on to win a Nobel Prize in 1912.[28] Eventually, Noguchi would be nominated numerous times for a Nobel Prize but never received one.[2]

Research involving syphilis

[edit]

In 1905, Treponema pallidum was first identified as the cause of syphilis by Fritz Schaudinn and Erich Hoffmann. In 1906, Noguchi was the first person in the United States to confirm and reproduce the Schaudinn-Hoffmann discovery of the spirochete after sixty days at the Rockefeller Institute.[11]

In 1909, Noguchi refined the Wasserman test, creating his own method, which was adopted as the standard, and he pioneered another method for testing syphilis, known as the butyric acid test, using fluid from the spinal column.[29] Consequently, his contributions made it much easeir to diagnosis syphilis.

Hideyo Noguchi microscope used to identify syphilis at the Rockefeller Institute.

One doctor reported using his butyric acid test and finding it more sensitive than the Wassermann test for spinal fluid. He stated Noguchi's attention to detail, “Noguchi had prepared for us all the antigen and ambocepter tests that we used. He also spent about two weeks at our laboratory and helped us materially by making many of the tests."[30]

In 1910, Noguchi published his manuscript, Serum Diagnosis of Syphilis, one of his most popular publications among doctors and physicians and assisting in the diagnosis of syphilis.[31]

Dr. Flexner told him to focus his efforts on obtaining a pure culture of the spirochete.[32] Flexner wrote in his diary, “Once he was started on a problem he would pursue it to the bitter end."[33] Noguchi set up hundreds of tubes for his cultures and used thousands of microscopic slides.[33] In February 1911, Noguchi believed that he had grown a pure culture and wrote to his childhood mentor Kobayashi, “I feel as if I am dancing in heaven."[33] He thought it might lead to eradication of syphilis but other scientists first had to reproduce it.[33]

Wards Island State Hospital, located on an island in the East River, held the New York State Pathologic Institute and was located opposite of the Rockefeller Institute.[30] Staff members at the Rockefeller Institute, Phoebus Levene and James B. Murphy had worked at the Pathologic Institute and were well aware of the problems of patients suffering from paresis. Noguchi collected samples from spinal cords and brains of patients that died from tabes dorsalis or of paresis to determine its relationship to syphilis.[30]

In 1912, Noguchi collected samples from 200 brains and 12 spinal cords from patients.[34] In collboration with J. W. Moore, a psychiatrist at Wards Island, Noguchi discovered the presence of Treponema pallidum in the spinal cord of a patient with tabes dorsalis and paresis.[35] Noguchi demonstrated that an organic agent could trigger psychosis.[34] After his discovery, reportedly his friend and neighbor, Ichiro Hori, said that he bursted in during the middle of the night, dancing and wearing nothing but his underwear, shouting, “I found it! I found it!"[30]

With this discovery, Noguchi's influence went beyond bacteriology. John C. Whiteborn wrote about the history of American psychiatry,

“In the organicist tradition, the outstanding psychiatric achievement as well as the final and conclusive link in the demonstration of the etiologic role of syphilis in general paresis was Noguchi and Moore’s demonstration of the spirochete in the brains of general paretics."[30]

Before his discovery, about 20 percent of the New York State mental hospitals were patients suffering from paresis that led to a patient’s death within five to seven years.[30] Noguchi allowed for these patients to be diagnosed with syphilis. Noguchi proved conclusively that general paresis and tabes dorsalis are late stages of tertiary syphilis of the brain and spinal cords.[34] In 1925, Association of American Physicians granted him its prized Kober Medal.[34]

Hideyo Noguchi at his microscope

When interviewed later, Noguchi said,

"All you need is enough test tubes, sufficient money, dedication, and hard work. ... and one more thing, you have got to be able to put up with endless failure."[36]

When compared to a genius, he said, "there was no such thing as genius. There was only the willingness to work three, four, even five times harder than the next man".[36] Dr. Noguchi's name is remembered in the binomial attached to another spirochete, Leptospira noguchii.[25] His pure culture of Treponema pallidum were considered unreproducible.[36] Researchers continued to struggle to create a pure culture of syphilis until it was successfully cultivated in a lab over a hundred years later in 2017.[37]

Unusual research methods

[edit]

Noguchi was prolific in his lab results. His single year record for numbers of published papers was an unheard of nineteen submitted to journals.[6] During his lifetime, he published over 200 paper and gave lecture tours throughout Europe.[6] Flexner described his work as "superhuman".[38]

Noguchi's perfectionism made it difficult for him to accept help though. He washed his own test tubes and grounded his own mixtures.[39] He rarely slept. He once said, "I can't allow someone who doesn't know exactly what I'm doing here to interfere."[39]

Sometimes he was irresponsible. His colleagues complained about his work station covered in cigarette butts.[40] Once he swallowed some solution of jaundice while pipetting a culture of the organism by sucking it in.[41][42] He washed his mouth out with alcohol but he felt he might have contracted jaundice.[42]

Noguchi rarely read extensively before his experimentation. He wanted to learn through his failure.[43] He tended to draw premature conclusions though. During a lecture on the transmission of syphilis to rabbits, he had been successful in only one out of thirty-six cases.[44] Colleagues did not understand his labeling system or lack there of for test tubes, Noguchi insisted he had it memorized.[33] He claimed to have a "special method"[43]

Personal life

[edit]

Marriage and relationships

[edit]
Ms. Noguchi (Mary Loretta Dardis) taken by Ichiro Hori

Noguchi secretly married Mary Loretta Dardis on April 10, 1912.[45] Both were the same age and came from a background of poverty. Her family were Irish immigrants. Mary, nicknamed Maize, called her husband, Hide.[12] His marriage was kept secret from his family, friends, and boss.[46] Flexner opposed his marriage to an American and thought he should marry someone of Japanese descent. Noguchi worried his marriage would put his promotion at risk because she would have to be added to his pension.[45] In addition, the taboo of an interracial marriage. Their marriage did become known to the public until his death.[12]

Mary and him found an apartment at 381 Central Park West.[47] Noguchi would turn his kitchen into a laboratory sometimes. Meanwhile, Mary read books out loud to him as he was at his microscope.[48]

Noguchi would often be caught late at night at the laboratory and people would ask him why he was not at home? His usual reply was, "Home? This is my home."[49] Later people assumed he worked so much to escape from his relationship, but through letters, it is revealed how even when Noguchi traveled to South America and Africa, Mary was a refuge from his work.[49]

Noguchi was a sociable person. He became close friends with his neighbor, Ichiro Hori, a Japanese painter and photographer.[45] He took portraits of the Mr. and Ms. Noguchi. Noguchi befriended Hajime Hoshi in the United States.[13] Later, Hoshi returned to Japan and started a successful pharmaceutical business in Tokyo.[13] Hoshi used his friendship with Noguchi's for his pharmaceutical company, which Hoshi offered to compensate him for. Noguchi said to give it to his struggling family in Inawashiro.[13]

Return to Japan

[edit]

He would write often to his mentor, Kobayashi, who granted him permission to call him "father."[13] His childhood mentor encouraged Noguchi to return and establish his career in Japan.[46] In 1912, he told his family that he did not plan to return to Japan.[50]

Hideyo Noguchi and his mother Shika

In a letter from his mother, Shika, who was notably illiterate, but learned to write, “Please come home soon, please come home soon, please come home soon, please come home soon.[13]” His mother worked as a midwife, but did not have much of an income and his family was at risk of losing the family home. Noguchi began sending money every month to his family.[51]

Shika's health declined. Noguchi sailed to visit her and accept the Imperial Prize on September 5, 1915.[52] Noguchi was surrounded at the dock with reporters.[52] He greeted his mentors Chiwaki and Kobayashi at the Imperial Hotel. Noguchi presented them with golden watches as gifts.[52]

When Noguchi greeted his mother, he showed her a photograph of Mary and she approved.[53] Noguchi spent another ten whole days with his mother, but returned to the United States, and this would be the last time he would be back in Japan.[53] In November 1918, his mother Shika died.[13]

Hideyo Noguchi's house in Shandaken

Illness and recovery in the Catskills

[edit]

Noguchi was told he had cardiac hypertrophy from his irregular intense activity after a physical examination. The doctor cautioned Noguchi about his usual mode of life.[54]

In 1917, Noguchi's health had further declined.[42] Mary called an ambulance since he refused to go to the hospital and was brought to Mount Sinai hospital. [42] He was diagnosed with typhoid fever, a severe case with perforation of his digestive tract.[41] His fever worsened and Mary and those around him thought he might die.[14]

Hoshi financially supported him during his treatment.[14] He made a slow recovery, Noguchi and Mary after seeing an advertisement in a newspaper took a four hour train ride to the Catskills. Both of them booked a room at the Glenbrook Hotel in the small hamlet of Shandaken, which had less than a hundred people. Noguchi felt it reminded him of his hometown in Fukushima.[12]

Hideyo Noguchi with friends on his porch in Shandaken

Noguchi decided to purchase approximately two hectares and build a house in Shandaken, becoming one of the largest landowners in the hamlet.[14] He bought it with the money he had leftover for his treatment.[14] The construction was completed around June 15, 1918.[14] Noguchi built his home alongside the Esopus river where he would fish and paint and spend most of his summers in 1918, 1922, and 1925 to 1927.[55]

Hideyo Noguchi using color photography technique autochrome lumière

Hobbies

[edit]

Noguchi was gifted oil paints from Ichiro Hori and he started painting in Shandaken.[12] He had excellent success. Ichiro said, "he would be good at anything" and was not surprised at his painting ability.[41] His paintings hang in the Hideyo Noguchi Memorial Museum.[56]

Noguchi was an amateur photographer. It was said that there is no scientific researcher who likes photography more than Noguchi.[57] He might have been one of the first non hand colored photographs of a Japanese person.[57] He achieved this through using autochrome lumière. He sent this in a letter, dated August 8, 1914, to his childhood mentor, Sakae Kobayashi.[57]

Luetin experiment and the antivivisectionists

[edit]

In 1911 and 1912 at the Rockefeller Institute in New York City, Noguchi was working on a syphilis skin test, which could provide an additional diagnostic procedure to complement the Wassermann test in the detection of syphilis.[58]

Professor William Henry Welch, Board of Scientific Directors at the Rockefeller Institute for Medical Research, urged Noguchi to conduct human trials.[58] The subjects were gathered from clinics and hospitals across New York City. In the experiment, the doctors given the tests injected an inactive product of syphilis, called luetin, under the skin on the upper arm of the patient.[58]

Skin reactions were studied, as they varied among healthy subjects and syphilis patients, based on the disease's stage and its treatment. The lutein test gave a positive reaction almost 100 percent for congenital and late syphilis.[59] While his diagnostic test was effective, it never had a reliable supply from the organism in pure culture form, never yielding practical results.[34]

Of the 571 subjects, 315 had syphilis.[60] The remaining subjects were controls; some of which were orphans between the ages of 2 and 18 years.[60] Most were hospital patients being treated for diseases, such as malaria, leprosy, tuberculosis, and pneumonia, and the subjects did not realize they were being experimented on and could not give consent.[60]

Reactions to the Luetin experiment

[edit]

Critics at the time, mainly from the anti-vivisectionist movement, noted that the Rockefeller Institute violated the rights of vulnerable orphans and hospital patients. There was concern among anti-vivisectionists that the test subjects had contracted syphilis from the experiments, but were proven to be false.[58][61]

In Dr. Noguchi's defense, Noguchi had performed tests on animals to ensure the safety of the lutein test.[58] Rockefeller Institute business manager Jerome D. Greene wrote a letter to the Anti-Vivisection Society, which had pointed out that Noguchi had tested it on himself and his fellow researchers before administering it.[58]

In a letter to District Attorney Charles S. Whitman, Greene said

"What public institution would not welcome a harmless and painless test which would enable it to decide in the case of every person admitted whether that person was afflicted with a venereal disease or not?"[58]

Much of the information came from newspapers, which did not consult medical professionals.[58] Greene mentioned the steps taken to ensure the sterility.[58] His explanation was considered a demonstration of the care that doctors were taking in research. Dr. Noguchi might have received more criticism due to his race with racist stereotypes being perpetuated. One of these newspaper described him as "the Oriental admirer of the fruits of Western civilization."[58]

In May 1912, the New York Society for the Prevention for Cruelty to Children asked the New York district attorney to press charges against Noguchi, but he declined.[62] Although, none of subjects were infected with syphilis, the Rockefeller Institute did test on patients without consent.[58]

Even though none of the subjects were injured in the experiment, Hideyo Noguchi had committed a wrong, it was 'a wrong without injury'.[58]Albert Leffingwell, a physician, social reformer, and advocate for vivisectionist restrictions, said in response to Jerome D. Greene.[58]

"If insurance could have been given that the luetin test implied no risk of any kind, might not the Rockefeller Institute have secured any number of volunteers by the offer of a gratuity of twenty or thirty dollars as a compensation for any discomfort that might be endured?"[58]

[edit]

During Noguchi's experiment, consent in medical science was by no means customary.[61] Other microbiologists such as Robert Koch in 1906 to 1907 operated medical concentration camps in Africa to find a cure for sleeping sickness, and ended up blinding some of his patients, and Louis Pasteur experimented on nine-year-old Joseph Meister without a medical license and was suspected to have lied about conducting animal trials.[63][64] Meanwhile, Noguchi received incredible scrutiny. The United States did not develop sufficient consensus about unethical human experimentation until the late 20th century, which brought about informed consent and the rights of patients to pass.[58]

Later career

[edit]
Noguchi decorated with medals

In July, 1914, Noguchi was made a full member of the Institute.[41] After returning from Japan, Noguchi was inspired to tackle Rocky mountain spotted fever, similar to another disease Tsutsugamushi present in Japan, where deaths were common among rice planters and farmers.[65][66] In addition, he began researching Jaundice because two Japanese scientists announced the discovery of a spirochete in the liver of a guinea pig which had developed jaundice in 1914.[67]

He once said, "Whether I succeed or not is another matter, but the problem is worth trying." Noguchi dabbled in researching numerous diseases at the same time. He felt one might get results.[65]

In 1921, he was elected as a member of the American Philosophical Society.[68] In the meantime, he was working on a revision and reprinting of Serum Diagnosis of Syphilis.[43]

In 1923, Noguchi had attempted creating passive and active immunity for Rocky mountain spotted fever.[43] One of his close assistants died during the research, which he mourned. He supported his assistants widow and children. [12] He made a breakthrough when he produced the first antiserum for the disease.[69]

His assistant, Akatsu, noted Noguchi showed discontent in his career even with recent breakthroughs.[70][71] Noguchi began losing his temper and scolding his assistants, but outside of the laboratory, Noguchi was a different and more open person. He would invite him to restaurants and speak Japanese – something he never did at the Rockefeller Institute.[47]

Hideyo Noguchi in his laboratory

In a letter to Flexner, he wrote,

"Somehow I cannot manage to find enough time to sit quietly and think over things calmly and reflect upon many things and phases in life. I seem to be chasing something all the time, perhaps an acquired habit or rather the lack of poise".[72]

Noguchi wanted to work on something more of a threat. Noguchi felt pressure from his boss Simon Flexner and his home country to bring respect and honor to his fellow Japanese countrymen.[70][73]

In June of 1918, Noguchi became chief investigator on a commission of the International Health Board traveled throughout Central America and South America to conduct research to develop a vaccine for yellow fever, and research Oroya fever, poliomyelitis and trachoma.[74][41]

Controversial research on yellow fever

[edit]
Hideyo Noguchi dissecting a crocodile along the Rio Grande

Noguchi decided to focus on yellow fever, which some of his colleagues died researching because of his experience with syphilis and spirochetes.[55][35] He thought the disease could have been a spirochete after traveling to Merida, Mexico and seeing patients demonstrate symptoms of Weil's disease, but similar to yellow fever. Noguchi identified it as Leptospira icterohemorrhagiae[35] and mistakingly declaring it the causative agent of yellow fever.[35] Other scientists unable to repeat his findings, it was questioned.[35]

During his career, whether yellow fever was a virus or a bacteria was a debated topic with viruses having been discovered in 1892.[75] Noguchi worked much of the next ten years to prove his theory that it was from spir bacteria. He even thought he developed a vaccine against it, unknowingly for Weil's disease.[12]

Following the death of British pathologist Adrian Stokes from yellow fever in September 1927,[76] it became increasingly evident that yellow fever was caused by a virus, not by the bacillus Leptospira icteroides, as Noguchi believed.[12] He began preparing to travel to Accra, Gold Coast (modern-day Ghana) to study yellow fever and get closer to specimens. Noguchi believed himself immune to yellow fever because of his own vaccine.

Trip to Lagos and Accra

[edit]
Hideyo Noguchi (facing backwards) and William Young in Accra
Disinfecting Hideyo Noguchi's laboratory in Accra

Feeling his reputation was at stake, Noguchi hastened to Lagos to carry out additional research. However, he found the working conditions in Lagos did not suit him. At the invitation of Dr. William Alexander Young, the young director of the British Medical Research Institute, Accra, Gold Coast, he moved to Accra and made this his base in 1927.

However, Noguchi proved a very difficult guest and by May 1928 Young regretted his invitation. Noguchi was secretive, working almost entirely at night to avoid contact with fellow researchers. His erratic behavior might have been from untreated syphilis, for which he was diagnosed in 1913, which might have progressed to neurosyphilis, prone to amnesia and personality changes.[12]

The diaries of Oskar Klotz, another researcher with the Rockefeller Foundation,[77] describe Noguchi's temper and behavior as erratic and bordering on the paranoid. His methods became haphazard. According to Klotz, Noguchi inoculated huge numbers of monkeys with yellow fever, but failed to keep proper records.[77] Meanwhile, his mental state deteriorated.

Death

[edit]
Older Hideyo Noguchi (1928)

Despite repeated promises to Young, Noguchi failed to keep infected mosquitoes in their secure containers. In May 1928, having been unable to find evidence for his theories, Noguchi was set to return to New York after spending six months in Africa, but was taken ill in Lagos.[12] Noguchi boarded a ship to sail home but on May 12 was put ashore at Accra and taken to a hospital. He was diagnosed with yellow fever and after some time, he died on 21 May.[78]

In a letter home, Young states, "He died suddenly noon Monday. I saw him Sunday afternoon – he smiled – and amongst other things, said, “Are you sure you are quite well?" "Quite." I said, and then he said "I don’t understand."[79] Seven days later, despite exhaustive sterilisation of the site, Young himself died of yellow fever.[80]

Legacy

[edit]

Noguchi was profoundly influential during his lifetime. Although, some of his research, including having discovered the causes of polio, rabies, trachoma, and yellow fever, were not able to be reproduced.[81] His finding that Noguchia granulosis causes trachoma was questioned within a year of his death, and overturned shortly thereafter.[82][83] Alongside his identification of the rabies pathogen[84] because the medium he invented to cultivate bacteria was seriously prone to contamination.[85]

Statue of Hideyo Noguchi in Ueno Park

After Noguchi's death in 1928, it would not be until the electron microscope was developed in 1931, which could identify yellow fever was a virus, even though skeptics had started to understand it was earlier.[86]

A Rockefeller Institute researcher said that Noguchi "knew nothing about the pathology of yellow fever" and criticized him for being unwilling to issue retractions for his claims.[87] Other critics describe it as flaws inside the system of peer review.[88] Some of his colleagues thought Noguchi to be a brilliant scientist, who brought attention to obscure and neglected tropical diseases, such as him giving renewed attention to trachoma research, affecting a large part of developing countries in Africa.

Noguchi's most famous contribution is his identification of the causative agent of syphilis in the brain tissues of patients with partial paralysis due to meningoencephalitis.[89] Other lasting contributions include the use of snake venom in serums, his antiserum for Rocky Mountain spotted fever, diagnostics tests, and the identification of the leishmaniasis pathogen and of Carrion's disease with Oroya fever.[89][12]

Hideyo Noguchi Memorial Museum

In the 21st century, the Nobel Foundation archives were opened for public inspection and research. Noguchi was nominated several times for the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine: in 1913–1915, 1920, 1921 and 1924–1927.[2] Some of Noguchi's prize nominations and work on a pure culture of syphilis and yellow fever received scrutiny.[90][12]

Selected works

[edit]
Washington, D.C.: Carnegie Institution. OCLC 2377892
Washington, D.C.: Carnegie Institution. OCLC 14796920
Philadelphia: J. B. Lippincott. OCLC 3201239
New York: P. B. Hoeber. OCLC 14783533

Honors during Noguchi's lifetime

[edit]

Noguchi was honored with Japanese and foreign decorations. He received honorary degrees from a number of universities.

The bust of the Japanese scientist and doctor Hideyo Noguchi was inaugurated on June 22, 2018, outside the Crystal Palace in Guayaquil

Noguchi was self-effacing in his public life, and he often referred to himself as "Funny Noguchi" as noted in Times Magazine. When Noguchi was awarded an honorary doctorate at Yale, William Lyon Phelps observed that the kings of Spain, Denmark and Sweden had conferred awards, but "perhaps he appreciates even more than royal honors the admiration and the gratitude of the people."[91]

Posthumous honors

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Hideyo Noguchi on the ¥1,000 banknote
The grave of Hideyo Noguchi in Woodlawn Cemetery

Noguchi's remains were returned to the United States and buried in Woodlawn Cemetery in the Bronx, New York City.[100]

In 1928, the Japanese government awarded Noguchi the Order of the Rising Sun, Gold and Silver Star, which represents the second highest of eight classes associated with the award.[101]

In 1979, the Noguchi Memorial Institute for Medical Research (NMIMR) was founded with funds donated by the Japanese government[102] at the University of Ghana in Legon, a suburb north of Accra.[103]

In 1981, the Instituto Nacional de Salud Mental (National Institute of Mental Health) "Honorio Delgado – Hideyo Noguchi" was founded with founds of the Peruvian Government and the JICA (Japan International Cooperation Agency) in Lima – Perú.[104]

Dr. Noguchi's portrait has been printed on Japanese 1000-yen banknotes since 2004.[105] In addition, the house near Inawashiro where he was born and brought up is preserved. It is operated as part of a museum to his life and achievements.

Noguchi's name is honored at the Centro de Investigaciones Regionales Dr. Hideyo Noguchi at the Universidad Autónoma de Yucatán.[106]

A 2.1 km street in Guayaquil, Ecuador downtown is named after Dr. Hideyo Noguchi.

Hideyo Noguchi Africa Prize

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The footstone of Hideyo Noguchi in Woodlawn Cemetery, New York City

The Japanese Government established the Hideyo Noguchi Africa Prize in July 2006 as a new international medical research and services award to mark the official visit by Prime Minister Jun'ichirō Koizumi to Africa in May 2006 and the 80th anniversary of Dr. Noguchi's death.[107] The Prize is awarded to individuals with outstanding achievements in combating various infectious diseases in Africa or in establishing innovative medical service systems.[108] The presentation ceremony and laureate lectures coincided with the Fourth Tokyo International Conference on African Development in late April 2008.[109] In 2009, the conference venue was moved from Tokyo to Yokohama as another way of honoring the man after whom the prize was named. In 1899, Dr. Noguchi worked at the Yokohama Port Quarantine Office as an assistant quarantine doctor.[110]

The Prize is expected to be awarded every five years.[111] The prize has been made possible through a combination of government funding and private donations.[112]

See also

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Notes

[edit]
  1. ^ Swaminathan, Srivatsan (May 30, 2024). "Hideyo Noguchi (1876–1928)". Arizona State University – Embryo Project Encyclopedia.
  2. ^ a b c "Hideyo Noguchi". Nobel Prize Nomination Archive. Archived from the original on October 1, 2022. Retrieved 7 August 2011.
  3. ^ a b c d Cervetti, Nancy (2012). S. Weir Mitchell, 1829–1914: Philadelphia's Literary Physician. Pennsylvania State University Press. p. 229.
  4. ^ Plesset, Isabel (1980). Noguchi and his Patrons. Fairleigh Dickinson University Press. p. 130.
  5. ^ "Dr. Noguchi is Dead, Martyr of Science". The New York Times. May 22, 1928.
  6. ^ a b c Kita, Atsushi (2005). Dr. Noguchi's Journey: A Life of Medical Search and Discovery. Kodansha. p. 164.
  7. ^ a b "野口英世の生涯/明治9年~明治24年". www.tdc.ac.jp.
  8. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m Mehl, Margaret (2023). "From Fukushima to Ghana: Noguchi Hideyo, the Peasant Boy Who Made It".
  9. ^ Eckstein, Gustav, Noguchi, 1931, Harper, NY|p. 11
  10. ^ Tan, Siang Yong; Furubayashi, Jill (October 2014). "Hideyo Noguchi (1876–1928): Distinguished bacteriologist". Singapore Medical Journal. 55 (10): 550–551. doi:10.11622/smedj.2014140. ISSN 0037-5675. PMC 4293967. PMID 25631898.
  11. ^ a b c Lederer, Susan (March 1985). "Hideyo Noguchi's Luetin Experiment and the Antivivisectionists". The History of Science Society. 76 (1): 34. doi:10.1086/353736. JSTOR 232791. PMID 3888912.
  12. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o Kita, Atsushi (2005). Dr. Noguchi's Journey: A Life of Medical Search and Discovery. Kodansha USA.
  13. ^ a b c d e f g Plesset, Isabel (1980). Noguchi and his Patrons. Rutherford, N.J: Fairleigh Dickinson University Press. p. 117.
  14. ^ a b c d e f Yoshimine; Do; Moriyama; Yanagisawa; Takayesu; Ishikawa, Norio; Shinichi; Norinaga; Takaaki; Yoshinori; Tatsuya (1999). "The Villa of the Late Dr. Hideyo Noguchi in Shandaken, New York State and the Tokyo Dental College". Journal of the Japanese Society of Dentistry History. 1 (1) – via National Library Diet Digital Collection.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
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  16. ^ KIta, Atsushi (2005). Dr. Noguchi's Journey: A Life Of Medical Search and Discovery. Kodansha USA. p. 131.
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  18. ^ a b c d Kita, Atsushi (2005). Dr. Noguchi's Journey: A Life of Medical Search and Discovery. Kodansha USA. pp. 136–138.
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  21. ^ Kita, Atsushi (2005). Dr. Noguchi's Journey: A Life of Medical Search and Discovery. Kodansha USA. p. 140.
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  67. ^ Otteraaen, Andrew (1919). "The Spirochete of Infectious Jaundice (Spiro- Chets Icterohemorrhagiae, Inada; Lep -Tospira, Noguchi) in House Rats in Chicago". John McCormick Institute for Infectious Disease. 24 (5): 485–488. doi:10.1093/infdis/24.5.485.
  68. ^ "APS Member History". search.amphilsoc.org. Retrieved 2021-05-03.
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  79. ^ WA Young, personal letter dated 23 May 1928
  80. ^ "Obituary, Dr. W.A. Young". Nature. 122 (3062): 29. 7 July 1928. Bibcode:1928Natur.122Q..29.. doi:10.1038/122029a0.
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  88. ^ Isabel Rosanoff Plesset, Noguchi and his patrons
  89. ^ a b "Dr. Hideyo Noguchi's Academic Achievements and Contribution to Africa" (PDF).
  90. ^ Japanese Government Internet TV: "Hideyo Noguchi Africa Prize," streaming video 2007/04/26
  91. ^ a b "Angll Inaugurated at Yale Graduation; New President Takes Office Before a Distinguished Audience of University Men; 784 Degrees are given; Mme. Curie, Sir Robert Jones, Archibald Marshall, J.W. Davis and Others Honored," New York Times. June 23, 1921.
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  100. ^ "A Place for All Eternity In Their Adopted Land", New York Times. September 1, 1997.
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  102. ^ University of Pennsylvania: Global Health Project Archived March 12, 2008, at the Wayback Machine
  103. ^ University of Ghana: Noguchi Institute (NMIMR). Archived January 7, 2009, at the Wayback Machine
  104. ^ "Instituto Nacional de Salud Mental Honorio Delgado – Hideyo Noguchi".
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  106. ^ Teleinformática, Departamento de. "Universidad Autónoma de Yucatán – 2016 – Directorio Universitario".
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  108. ^ Rockefeller Foundation: Noguchi Prize, history Archived May 23, 2007, at the Wayback Machine
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References

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