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The Discovery and Naming of Staphylococcus Aureus: Abigail Orenstein

Alexander Ogston discovered Staphylococcus aureus in 1880 while examining pus under a microscope. He observed "beautiful tangles, tufts and chains of round organisms" and hypothesized that acute abscesses were caused by micrococci. Ogston demonstrated that injecting animals with pus from abscesses caused new abscesses and sepsis. He named the clustered micrococci "staphylococci" in 1882. In 1884, Anton Rosenbach isolated two strains of staphylococci and named them Staphylococcus aureus and Staphylococcus albus.
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
175 views2 pages

The Discovery and Naming of Staphylococcus Aureus: Abigail Orenstein

Alexander Ogston discovered Staphylococcus aureus in 1880 while examining pus under a microscope. He observed "beautiful tangles, tufts and chains of round organisms" and hypothesized that acute abscesses were caused by micrococci. Ogston demonstrated that injecting animals with pus from abscesses caused new abscesses and sepsis. He named the clustered micrococci "staphylococci" in 1882. In 1884, Anton Rosenbach isolated two strains of staphylococci and named them Staphylococcus aureus and Staphylococcus albus.
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Reprinted from www.antimicrobe.

org

The Discovery and Naming of Staphylococcus aureus

Abigail Orenstein

Alexander Ogston (1844-1929) was a Scottish surgeon who in 1880 discovered


the major cause of pus. Distressed with the high rate of post-operative mortality and
unwilling to accept death as a likely outcome of surgery, Ogston was an early convert to
the value of antisepsis advocated by Joseph Lister (1827-1912). Given the absence of
inflammation in the wounds of Lister's post-operative patients, Ogston abandoned the
contemporary teaching that suppuration was a necessary stage in wound healing, and
adopted the antiseptic techniques of Lister. Ogston lauded Lister for transforming the
future of surgery from a "hazardous lottery into a safe and soundly based science.

However, it was Ogston who provided the explanation. Lister believed that air
was the source of putrefaction. By applying carbolic acid (phenol) dressings to surgical
wounds air was excluded, thereby preventing suppuration, a form of putrefaction. For
Ogston, however, this explanation was insufficient. Often "meditating on the subject [he]
became more and more convinced that there was a single cause, and that the cause was
some special germ." He opened the abscess of one of his patients, made a stained smear
of the pus and examined it under a microscope.

“My delight may be conceived when there were revealed to me beautiful tangles, tufts
and chains of round organisms in great numbers, which stood out clear and distinct
among the pus cells and debris...”(1)

Ogston hypothesized that acute abscesses were caused by micrococci. After


injecting pus from acute abscesses into guinea pigs and mice, he demonstrated that new
abscesses formed, followed by signs of septicemia. Examining the blood of the septic
animals he found micrococci. If, however, he pretreated the pus with heat or carbolic acid
before injecting it, abscess formation was avoided. Ogston also designed a method for
culturing micrococci by inoculating hens' eggs with pus and incubating them. The
contents of the infected eggs were found to have similar pyogenic activity to that of the
original pus (2,3).

1
Reprinted from www.antimicrobe.org

Although Ogston was not the first to examine pus microscopically and describe
micrococci (from the Greek kokkos, meaning berry), those in chains had already been
designated Streptococci by Billroth (1874). In 1882 Ogston named the clustered
micrococci "staphylococci," from the Greek staphyle, meaning bunch of grapes.

In 1884 Anton J. Rosenbach (1842-1923), a German surgeon, isolated two


strains of staphylococci, which he named for the pigmented appearance of their colonies:
Staphylococcus aureus, from the Latin aurum for gold, and Staphylococcus albus (now
called epidermidis), from the Latin albus for white (5).

REFERENCES

1. Elek SD. Staphylococcus pyogenes and its relation to disease. Edinburgh: E. & S.
Livingstone, 1959. p. 3.

2. Ogston, A. Ueber Abscesse. Arch Klin Chir 1880; 25:588-600.

3. Ogston A. Report upon micro-organisms in surgical diseases. Brit Med J 1881; 1:369-
375.

4. Ogston A. Micrococcus poisoning. J Anat Physiol, 1882; 16:526-- 6; 1883; 17:24-58.

5. Rosenbach, AJ. Mikro-Qrganismen bei den Wund-Infections-Krankheiten des


Menschen. Wiesbaden, J.F. Bergmann, 1884. p. 18

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