DOI 10.1378/chest.08-2730 2009;136;578-582Chest Marc A. Shampo and Edward C. Rosenow III A History of Tuberculosis on Stamps http://chestjournal.chestpubs.org/content/136/2/578.full.html services can be found online on the World Wide Web at: The online version of this article, along with updated information and ISSN:0012-3692 )http://chestjournal.chestpubs.org/site/misc/reprints.xhtml( written permission of the copyright holder. this article or PDF may be reproduced or distributed without the prior Dundee Road, Northbrook, IL 60062. All rights reserved. No part of Copyright2009by the American College of Chest Physicians, 3300 Physicians. It has been published monthly since 1935. is the official journal of the American College of ChestChest © 2009 American College of Chest Physicians by guest on October 15, 2011chestjournal.chestpubs.orgDownloaded from http://chestjournal.chestpubs.org/content/136/2/578.full.html http://chestjournal.chestpubs.org/site/misc/reprints.xhtml http://chestjournal.chestpubs.org/ A History of Tuberculosis on Stamps Marc A. Shampo, PhD; and Edward C. Rosenow, III, MD, Master FCCP Tuberculosis, only a few decades ago, was believed to be under control and decreasing in incidence, in both developed and developing countries. A number of scientists and physicians have contributed to the understanding of tuberculosis and have been honored on postage stamps by several countries around the world. This article contains brief histories of these individuals and depictions of the postage stamps commemorating them for their contributions to the better understanding of the disease. (CHEST 2009; 136:578 –582) T uberculosis, a disease caused by several speciesof mycobacteria, has afflicted humankind for many thousands of years. It is a worldwide disease and in many countries is a major cause of death.1 After declining in incidence for a number of years, it has begun to increase in frequency, especially in developing and underdeveloped countries. This is primarily because of the AIDS epidemic. Ninety percent of the cases of tuberculosis diagnosed are pulmonary tuberculosis caused by Mycobacterium tuberculosis. The modern treatment of tuberculosis has been complicated both by resistance to drug therapy and by intermingling of the disease with HIV. Many famous persons have been victims of tuber- culosis, as follows: English poets John Keats (1795– 1821) and Percy Shelley (1792–1822); American writers Henry David Thoreau (1817–1862) and Ralph Waldo Emerson (1803–1882); French poet Alfred de Musset (1810 –1857); French novelist Honoré de Balzac (1799 –1849); English novelists the Brontë sisters (Charlotte, 1816 –1855; Emily, 1818 –1848; and Anne, 1820 –1849); Scottish novelist Robert Louis Stevenson (1850 –1894); British administrator-financier Cecil Rhodes (1853–1902); Italian violin virtuoso Nicolò Paganini (1782–1840); and Polish composer Frederic Chopin (1810 –1849). In the first half of the 20th century, many pulmo- nologists entered their profession because they themselves had tuberculosis. One of the original pulmonary journals was Tubercle. The following eight historical figures associated with tuberculosis have had stamps issued in their honor: René Laënnec, Jean Antoine Villemin, Rob- ert Koch, Carlo Forlanini, Léon C. A. Calmette, Jean-Marie Camille Guérin, Selman A. Waksman, and Edward Trudeau. The only one issued by the United States was for Trudeau. In many countries but not all, for a stamp to be issued, the individual must be deceased (in the United States one excep- tion is a living president after his term of office). The approval goes through a citizens’ advisory commit- tee. The whole process can become very political. In many smaller countries the sale of postage stamps is their sole source of income. As a result many differ- ent stamps are printed. René Laënnec René Laënnec made a number of important con- tributions to the diagnosis of various diseases. In 1816, he invented the stethoscope, which made possible the early and more accurate identification of diseases of the chest. Laënnec was born on February 12, 1781, in Quimper, Brittany, in northwestern France. He received his MD degree from the École de Santé in Paris in 1804, after which he established Manuscript received November 19, 2008; revision accepted April 6, 2009. Affiliation: From the Division of Pulmonary and Critical Care Medicine, Mayo Clinic School of Medicine, Rochester, MN. © 2009 American College of Chest Physicians. Reproduction of this article is prohibited without written permission from the American College of Chest Physicians (www.chestjournal.org/site/ misc/reprints.xhtml). Correspondence to: Edward C. Rosenow, III, MD, Mayo Clinic, Pulmonary Department, Mayo Clinic, E 18 B, Rochester, MN 55905-0001; e-mail: rosenow.edward@mayo.edu DOI: 10.1378/chest.08-2730 CHEST Special Feature 578 Special Feature © 2009 American College of Chest Physicians by guest on October 15, 2011chestjournal.chestpubs.orgDownloaded from http://chestjournal.chestpubs.org/ a successful private practice in Paris and also held a succession of positions at the leading medical insti- tutions in France. For 3 years after he invented the stethoscope, Laënnec gathered data on diseases and conditions of the chest and correlated them with findings at autopsy. He published these findings in 1819 in his classic book De l’Auscultation Médiate. In this book, Laënnec described his new method of diagnosis by use of the stethoscope and provided details on the sounds of the heart and lungs in various afflictions, such as edema, tuberculosis, and pneumonia. Dur- ing his lifetime, Laënnec had symptoms of pulmo- nary tuberculosis and probably had asthma. He died of pulmonary tuberculosis in Kerlouarnec, France, on August 3, 1826, when he was only 45 years old. In 1952, France honored him on a stamp2 (Please note that it is not necessary to go back to the catalog year the stamp was issued; the stamp will be in the current year catalog. Five to seven volumes are published every year at approx- imately $100 per volume. Most libraries carry these.) [Fig 1]. Jean Antoine Villemin Jean Antoine Villemin, a French physician, proved in 1867 that tuberculosis was an infectious disease, transmitted by contact from humans to animals and from one animal to another. His most important work, Studies on Tuberculosis, published in 1868, described his careful experiments in which he proved that sputum from a tubercular patient, fluid from tubercular cavities, and material from a scrof- ulous gland, when injected subcutaneously, pro- duced tubercular lesions in rabbits. Villemin was born on January 28, 1827, in Prey, Vosges, in northeastern France. Starting in 1849, he studied at Bruyères and at the military medical school in Strasbourg, qualifying as an army physician in 1853. In 1853, he went to Val-de-Grâce, the military medical school in Paris, for further study, receiving his MD degree in 1863. In the same year, he was appointed professor at Val-de-Grâce, where he remained until his retirement. While at Val-de-Grâce he observed that healthy young men from the country often developed tuberculosis while living in the close quarters of military barracks. Aware that glanders, a disease similar to tuberculosis, is transmitted in horses by inoculation, he began the study of tuberculosis. Villemin died in Paris on October 6, 1892, and was honored on a stamp3 issued by France in 1951 (Fig 2). Robert Koch The foremost figure in the field of tuberculosis studies is Robert Koch. In 1905, Koch received the Nobel Prize in Physiology and Medicine for his discovery of the causes of tuberculosis and cholera. He was born on December 11, 1843, in Clausthal, near Hannover, in north central Germany. After receiving his medical degree from the University of Göttingen in 1866, he practiced in a number of small towns and villages in Germany. In 1880, Koch was appointed to the Imperial Health Office in Berlin, and in 1882 he announced the discovery of the tubercle bacillus. In 1885, Koch was appointed professor of hygiene at the University of Berlin and director of the new Berlin Hygiene Institute. In 1890, he introduced tuberculin, a solu- tion containing growth products of the bacillus, as a cure for tuberculosis, provoking worldwide excite- Figure 2. Jean Antoine Villemin (1827–1892). Figure 1. René Laënnec (1782–1826). www.chestjournal.org CHEST / 136 / 2 / AUGUST, 2009 579 © 2009 American College of Chest Physicians by guest on October 15, 2011chestjournal.chestpubs.orgDownloaded from http://chestjournal.chestpubs.org/ ment. Although tuberculin proved harmful, it came to be used as an indicator of previous exposure to the tubercle bacillus (tuberculin test). Effective manage- ment of tuberculosis was not achieved until antibi- otic drugs became available many years later. Koch died of heart failure on May 27, 1910, in Baden- Baden, Germany. He was honored on a stamp4 issued by Germany in 1944 to commemorate the centenary of his birth (Fig 3). Carlo Forlanini Carlo Forlanini, Italian medical scholar and edu- cator, is credited with providing the first definitive treatment of pulmonary tuberculosis: artificial pneu- mothorax. This novel approach (collapsing the af- fected lung and the cavity within it) introduced a new era in treatment, although it was much opposed at the time. Forlanini reported his results in 1906, after 12 years of experience with the method. It is still used occasionally, with some refinements. Forlanini was born on June 11, 1847, in Milan. He received his MD degree from the University of Pavia in Italy in 1870. In the wake of the discoveries made by Robert Koch, Forlanini became interested in the pathology of diseases of the lungs, particularly pul- monary tuberculosis. He began his research in 1882, when he first postulated his theory of pulmonary therapy. From 1882 to 1906, he introduced many modifications and refinements in an effort to im- prove the efficiency of artificial pneumothorax. During the last years of is life, Forlanini served as a professor of medicine at the University of Pavia. He died on May 26, 1918, in Nervi, a small seaport on the Gulf of Genoa in Italy. In 1953, Belgium honored him on a stamp,5 the surtax of which was used for antituberculosis research (Fig 4). Léon C. A. Calmette Léon C. A. Calmette, codeveloper of the antitu- berculosis vaccine Bacillus Calmette-Guérin with Jean-Marie Camille Guérin, was born in Nice on July 12, 1863, and received his MD degree from L’École Médécine Navale de Brest. In 1865, he obtained his doctorate from the University of Paris. During his lifetime, he served as a physician in many different parts of the world (Gabon, Newfoundland, Hong Kong, and Saigon). He returned to France to be- come head of the Pasteur Institute at Lille, where he established the first tuberculosis dispensary in Eu- rope, and thereafter he devoted his life to the study of tuberculosis. While using a virulent bovine strain of the tubercle bacillus, Calmette found, after 13 years of study, that the strain was nonvirulent but still tuberculinogenic enough to incite antibodies. The resulting vaccine, introduced in 1921, was called Bacillus Calmette-Guérin. In 1922, he authorized the use of Bacillus-Calmette-Guérin in infants with tuberculous parents, and by 1924 the vaccine was being distributed generally. Several new vaccines are currently being developed. The first recombinant antituberculosis vaccine entered clinical trials in the United States in 2004. Figure 3. Robert Koch (1843–1910). Figure 4. Carlo Forlanini (1847–1918). 580 Special Feature © 2009 American College of Chest Physicians by guest on October 15, 2011chestjournal.chestpubs.orgDownloaded from http://chestjournal.chestpubs.org/ Calmette died of infectious hepatitis, cardiac col- lapse, and acute peritonitis on October 29, 1933. He was honored on a stamp6 issued in 1948 by his native France (Fig 5). Jean-Marie Camille Guérin The other contributor to the vaccine was Jean-Marie Camille Guérin, a veterinarian surgeon who was born in Poitiers, France, on December 22, 1872. In 1892, Guérin enrolled at L’École Nationale Vétérinaire d’Alfort, from which he graduated as a veterinary surgeon in 1896. He worked with Calmette from 1908 to 1921, and together they produced the successful vaccine. In 1917, Calmette was named assistant direc- tor of the Pasteur Institute in Paris, and he appointed Guérin head of Services de la Tuberculose at Lille. Guérin died on June 9, 1961, and was honored on a stamp7 issued by Monaco in 1996 (Fig 6). Selman A. Waksman Selman A. Waksman in 1944 introduced the anti- biotic streptomycin, the first effective drug treat- ment for tuberculosis, for which he was awarded the 1952 Nobel Prize for Physiology and Medicine. Waksman was born on July 22, 1888, in Priluka in the Ukraine. In 1910, he immigrated to the United States, and he obtained a bachelor’s degree in agri- culture from Rutgers University in New Jersey in 1915. In 1918, he obtained a PhD degree in bio- chemistry from the University of California and returned to Rutgers as a microbiologist at the New Jersey State Agricultural Experiment Station. Early in 1943, with one of his graduate students, Waksman developed streptomycin, a material found to be active against many Gram-negative organisms, in- cluding the causative agent of tuberculosis. Waksman retired from active research in 1958. He died in 1973 and was honored on a stamp8 issued by Gambia in 1989 (Fig 7). Edward Livingston Trudeau Edward Livingston Trudeau was honored on a stamp9 issued by the United States in 2008 for Figure 5. Léon C. A. Calmette (1863–1933). Figure 7. Selman A. Waksman (1888 –1973). Figure 8. Edward Livingston Trudeau (1848 –1915).Figure 6. Jean-Marie Camille Guérin (1872–1961). www.chestjournal.org CHEST / 136 / 2 / AUGUST, 2009 581 © 2009 American College of Chest Physicians by guest on October 15, 2011chestjournal.chestpubs.orgDownloaded from http://chestjournal.chestpubs.org/ establishing the first successful sanitorium in the United States for the open-air treatment of tubercu- losis (Fig 8). Although the main treatment for pa- tients with tuberculosis now is hospitalization with drugs and possibly surgery, until 1945 these patients were often treated by placement in a sanitorium on the theory that exposure to open air was beneficial. Trudeau was born in 1848 in New York City into a family of physicians. When he was in his late teens, his elder brother contracted tuberculosis, and Ed- ward nursed him. He was deeply affected by the death of his brother 3 months later. When he was 20 years old (1868), Trudeau en- rolled in the College of Physicians and Surgeons at Columbia College (now Columbia University), where he completed his medical training in 1871. In 1873, Trudeau was himself diagnosed with tuber- culosis. He went to the Adirondack Mountains in upstate New York and subsequently regained his health. In 1876, he went to Saranac Lake (New York) and established a successful medical prac- tice there. In 1882, after reading about the successful treatment of tuberculosis with the “rest cure” in cold, clear mountain air, Trudeau founded the Adirondack Cot- tage Sanatorium. It was reported that the British novelist Robert Louis Stevenson, suffering from tuber- culosis, spent several months at this sanitorium. After a fire destroyed his laboratory at the sanito- rium, in 1894, Trudeau organized the Saranac Labora- tory for the study of tuberculosis. He died in 1915. Acknowledgments Author contributions: Dr. Shampo supplied the stamps and data and contributed to the writing of the manuscript. Dr. Rosenow wrote and revised the manuscript. Both authors con- tributed to idea conception. Financial/nonfinancial disclosures: The authors have no con- flicts of interest to declare. References 1 Dormandy, T. The white death: a history of tuberculosis. New York, NY: University Press, 2000; 433 2 Scott Postage Stamp Catalog No. 685. Sidney, OH: Scott Publishing Co, 1952 3 Scott Postage Stamp Catalog No. 656. Sidney, OH: Scott Publishing Co, 1951 4 Scott Postage Stamp Catalog No. B251. Sidney, OH: Scott Publishing Co, 1944 5 Scott Postage Stamp Catalog No. B552. Sidney, OH: Scott Publish- ing Co, 1953 6 Scott Postage Stamp Catalog No. B232. Sidney, OH: Scott Publishing Co, 1948 7 Scott Postage Stamp Catalog No. 2012. Sidney, OH: Scott Publishing Co, 1996 8 Scott Postage Stamp Catalog No. 910. Sidney, OH: Scott Publishing Co, 1989 9 Scott Postage Stamp Catalog No. 3432A. Sidney, OH: Scott Publishing Co, 2008 582 Special Feature © 2009 American College of Chest Physicians by guest on October 15, 2011chestjournal.chestpubs.orgDownloaded from http://chestjournal.chestpubs.org/ DOI 10.1378/chest.08-2730 2009;136; 578-582Chest Marc A. Shampo and Edward C. Rosenow III A History of Tuberculosis on Stamps October 15, 2011This information is current as of http://chestjournal.chestpubs.org/content/136/2/578.full.html Updated Information and services can be found at: Updated Information & Services http://www.chestpubs.org/site/misc/reprints.xhtml found online at: Information about reproducing this article in parts (figures, tables) or in its entirety can be Permissions & Licensing http://www.chestpubs.org/site/misc/reprints.xhtml Information about ordering reprints can be found online: Reprints "Services" link to the right of the online article. 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