Heroes and Cultural Identity Project
SCE Heroes - Dr Barry Marshall and Dr Robin Warren
BUSTING THE STOMACH BUGS
MARSHALL AND WARREN
by Dorota Rzetelska
Imagine
that you are a scientist, that you have found a cause of a disease that
affects millions of people. The proof is in your laboratory. The results
of your research are undeniable. What would you think, how much time would
it take others to accept your findings?
In the case of Dr. Barry Marshall and Dr. Robin Warren, it took more than
20 years for their discovery to be recognized. The two Australian scientists
turned medical dogma on its head. They claimed that ulcers were not caused
by stress, but by the bacterium Helicobacter pylori. What was so unusual
about their findings?
They ascertained that Helicobacter pylori can live in the human stomach.
Nobody knew that this was possible. Conventional thinking was that no
bacterium can survive within the stomach because of its very high acidic
pH. At that time (early eighties), doctors believed that the main causes
of gastritis and stomach ulcers were stress and lifestyle.
Dr.
Barry Marshall was determined to reveal the truth. In July 1984 he drank
a germ-laden liquid himself containing the bacterium Helicobacter pylori
and become ill, proving that a healthy person could be infected by bacterium.
This experiment helped establish Marshall and Warren's controversial idea
within the scientific and medical community.
Dr. Barry Marshall said:"The idea of stress
was just so entrenched,
nobody could really believe that it was bacteria. It had to come from
some weird place like Perth, Western Australia, because I think nobody
else would have even considered it".
So, why have I chosen Dr. Barry Marshall and Dr. Robin Warren as my scientific
heroes? I admire their determination, perseverance in the face of skepticism,
and also their remarkable achievements. I respect their faith in the importance
of their research, and the fact they never gave up, or resigned themselves
to failure. Thanks to their research, peptic ulcer disease can be cured
by a short regime of antibiotics and prevented from becoming a chronic,
frequently disabling condition.
In 2005, 25 years after their discovery, the two researchers were awarded
the Nobel Prize for Medicine and Physiology, finally recognizing their
invaluable research.
Dorota Rzetelska is a science student following
a one year university access course in biological sciences.

