Daniel Carleton Gajdusek

@Medical Researcher, Career and Childhood

Daniel Carleton Gajdusek was a physician and medical researcher

Sep 9, 1923

AmericanHarvard UniversityPhysiciansVirgo Celebrities
Biography

Personal Details

  • Birthday: September 9, 1923
  • Died on: December 12, 2008
  • Nationality: American
  • Famous: Medical Researcher, Physicians, Harvard University, Physicians
  • Universities:
    • Harvard University
    • Harvard University (1946)
    • University of Rochester (1943)
    • Harvard Medical School
  • Notable Alumnis:
    • Harvard University
  • Birth Place: Yonkers

Daniel Carleton Gajdusek born at

Yonkers

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Birth Place

Childhood And Education Daniel Carleton Gajdusek was born on September 9, 1923 in Yonkers, New York. He was born to a butcher called Karol Gajdusek. Daniel Carleton Gajdusek studied in various local schools and showed an interest in science from a very young age. Apart from being a voracious reader like his mother, Gajdusek also had the privilege to travel around the world. From a very young age, Gajdusek travel to the mystic lands of the Orient and even attended short courses on Egyptology, natural History, entomology, geology, botany literature and the arts. He also decided to work part-time at the Boyce Thompson Laboratories to learn more about synthesized acids when he was 16 years old. At the age of 18, Gajdusek studied at the University of Rochester, where his subjects were mathematics, chemistry, physics and biology. He graduated from here in 1943. He then obtained an M.D. from Harvard University in 1946. Following this, Gajdusek decided to study further and conducted post-doctoral research at the Columbia University and the California Institute of Technology.Early Career After completing his studies, Gajdusek was drafted into the military (Walter Reed Army Medical Center) as a virologist in 1950. In 1954, Gajdusek worked part time as a visiting medical attendant at the ‘Walter and Eliza Hall Institute of Medical Research’ in Melbourne, Australia. Here, he began his work on the disease ‘Kuru’, which eventually fetched him the Nobel Prize.Gajdusek’s Work On ‘Kuru’ Gajdusek was introduced to the disease Kuru by a person called Vincent Zigas, a medical officer in the district of New Guinea. It is believed that this viral disease affected the central nervous system, particularly the brain, and was prominent in the Fore Tribe region of New Guinea. Gajdusek was very interested in the subject and decided to conduct further research to see if he could come up with a solution for the problem. He connected the origins of the disease to the practice of funerary cannibalism in the Fore tribe region. Gajdusek stood against the practice of cannibalism, and received tremendous support from his other peers. Within a generation, the disease was eradicated permanently.The disease Kuru was known as ‘laughing sickness’among the Fore tribes because, the patients who were infected with this disease exhibited excessive laughter as a syndrome. To better his research at the subject, Gajdusek lived among the Fore tribe, studied their culture, and performed autopsies on the bodies of the victims of Kuru. Finally Gajdusek discovered that the disease spread through the consumption of the brains of the deceased who suffered from Kuru, which happened to be a common practice in this region. Hence, Gajdusek was successfully able to demonstrate the infectious spread of a certain viral disease in humans in the world. After establishing that the disease was deadly, Gajdusek wanted to probe further to identify the biological nature of the infection. Subsequently, he noticed a similarity between ‘scrapie’ – an inexplicable disease found in goats and sheep, and the Kuru disease. Along with the help of Stanley Prusiner, he concluded that the diseases’ were caused by rogue proteins known as ‘prions’.Later Stages All of Gajdusek’s medical findings about ‘Kuru’ were generally accepted by the medical community worldwide. However, there were countless disputes on whether cannibalism still existed when he resided with the Fore tribe, researching about the disease. Many a time, Gajdusek revealed that he never actually witnessed Cannibalism himself, and that he would never allow such a thing even if he came across such an act. According to Arens and Gajdusek, the conditions in the Fore region began to improve after the arrival of the Europeans in 1961. Towards the end of his life, Gajdusek stated that cannibalism was not the only cause of the Kuru disease. His last explanation was that women retained scraps of human brain under their nails as a result of cannibalism, and when they brushed or combed their hair or the scalps of their children, the disease would spread by touch. After his dedicated research and study in the field of Kuru, Gajdusek became the chief head of the laboratories for neurological and viral research at the National Institute of Health in 1958 and was later instated to the National Academy of Sciences in 1974 for microbial biology.Personal LifeThere have been various controversies surrounding the life of Daniel Carleton Gajdusek.One such popular controversy stemmed when he brought back 56 male children, from one of his trips, to live with him in the United States. He promised them high school and college education. One of these boys, who is now an adult, complained to the authorities about being sexually molested by Gajdusek as a boy. Gajdusek was arrested and charged with child molestation in 1996, after the statements from the victim and after police found convicting entries in Gajdusek’s personal diary.Towards the end of his life, Gajdusek was sentenced to jail for a year. He never returned to the United States after that, and lived the remainder of his life in Amsterdam and Troms, Norway. Gajdusek openly admitted that he was drawn to the concept of incest, molestation and indulged in sexual encounters with younger boys.Death And Legacy Daniel Carleton Gajdusek died on December 12, 2008 in Troms, Norway. He was 85 years old and was apparently working at the time of his death. Gajdusek’s discovery and works on Kuru is still considered valid across medical institutions around the world.

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