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by Fomite
2338 days ago
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Note that phage therapy was used and understood in the west well before the Soviet Union came into existence. It fell out of use because of the dangers from poorly purified phage preps, and because antibiotics showed up at about the same time those issues could have been fixed, and are a far more useful general purpose tool. |
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Directly after the paragraph about its discovery by an Englishman and a Frenchman:
> A Georgian, George Eliava, was making similar discoveries. He travelled to the Pasteur Institute in Paris where he met d'Hérelle, and in 1923 he founded the Eliava Institute in Tbilisi, Georgia, devoted to the development of phage therapy.
Georgia was part of the USSR at the time. It appears to be the first reference to any actual therapy.
In any case it's a pretty tight schedule from the discovery of bacterophages in 1915/1917 to the formation of the USSR in 1922.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Phage_therapy
Edit:
Found something here: https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3442826/
> From its first field trials as a prophylactic against avian typhosis (Salmonella gallinarum) in rural France in 1919 [...]
I'm gonna file that under kinda, but not really.
Something more in Félix d'Herelle's biography: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/F%C3%A9lix_d%27Herelle
> The first patient was healed of dysentery using phage therapy in August 1919. Many more followed. At the time, none, not even d'Hérelle, knew exactly what a phage was.