Do you think it ethical and appropriate for marshall to


Ulcers and bacteria

Case study on H. pylorfiand ulcers. The case study examines the story of Dr. Robin Warren and Dr. Barry Marshall and their research on ulcers. Follow their path from research to results and rejection to acceptance. Examine questions about ethics, the scientific method and the role of chance in scientific discovery.

Read through the case study and answer any four questions. Write your post in a narrative format based on your answers to the questions.

Case study - Helicobacter pylorfiand the Bacterial Theory of Ulcers by Debra Ann Meuler

Questions

1. Do you think it ethical and appropriate for Marshall to have used himself as a test subject and swallowed a sample of Helicobacter pylori? What precautions did he take? Would you do it? Why or why not?

2. How did the colloidal bismuth subcitrate (CBS) experiment provide evidence supporting Warren and Marshall's hypothesis?

3. Answer the following questions based on the data presented in Fig. 3:
a. In Table II, of those patients with ulcers, how many were positive for H. pylori? Of those patients with normal endoscopic results, how many were positive for the bacteria?
b. Based on this data, Warren and Marshall hypothesized that there was a causal relationship between ulcers and bacterial infection. But there were 4 patients with ulcers that were negative for the bacteria. Why is this not significant?
c. If there is a causal relationship between the presence of H. pylorfiand ulcers, how might you explain that 50% of the patients with a normal endoscopic examination were infected with the bacteria?
d. In your own words, explain the results presented in Table III. What do you conclude from this data?

4. Robert Koch was a German physician who identified the bacteria causing anthrax and tuberculosis. His methods established four criteria that must be met for a specific pathogen to be considered the cause of a disease. These four criteria are listed below. For each one, discuss whether Warren and Marshall fulfilled them and, if so, how.

I. The pathogen should be found in the bodies of animals having the disease.
II. The suspected pathogen should be obtained from the diseased animal and grown outside the body.
III. The inoculation of that pathogen, grown in pure cultures, should produce the disease in an experimental animal.
IV. The same pathogen should be isolated from the experimental animal after the disease develops.

5. What role did chance, assumptions, and curiosity play in Warren and Marshall's research on Helicobacter pylori?

6. Describe how the story of Warren and Marshall's discovery illustrates the process of science.

7. How does this case illustrate the tentative nature of science?

8. How does this case illustrate the role of technology in scientific progress?

9. Why is this discovery significant? Do you think it is worthy of a Nobel Prize?

10. What does the Helicobacter story tell us? What lessons can be learned from this story?

11. Albert Gyorgyi, 1937 Nobel Laureate in Physiology and Medicine, once said in his Nobel award speech:
"Discovery consists of seeing what everybody has seen and thinking what nobody has thought." Describe how this statement applies to Warren and Marshall's pioneering work on peptic ulcer disease.

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