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Sir '''John Henry Gaddum''' [[Fellow of the Royal Society|FRS]] (31 March 1900 - 30 June 1965) was an English [[pharmacologist]]. He was educated at [[Rugby School]] and [[Trinity College, Cambridge]]. He became [[professor]] of pharmacology at the [[Cairo University|University of Cairo]]. Subsequent to this he took up a chair at [[University College London]]. He later worked at [[Porton Down]]. He is best remembered for his classic work "Gaddum's Pharmacology". He is the first scientist postulated that 5-HT might have a role in mood regulation.<ref>Gaddum, J. H. (1957), SEROTONIN-LSD INTERACTIONS. Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences, 66: 643–648.</ref> |
Sir '''John Henry Gaddum''' [[Fellow of the Royal Society|FRS]] (31 March 1900 - 30 June 1965) was an English [[pharmacologist]]. He was educated at [[Rugby School]] and [[Trinity College, Cambridge]]. He became [[professor]] of pharmacology at the [[Cairo University|University of Cairo]]. Subsequent to this he took up a chair at [[University College London]]. He later worked at [[Porton Down]]. He is best remembered for his classic work "Gaddum's Pharmacology". He is the first scientist postulated that 5-HT might have a role in mood regulation.<ref>Gaddum, J. H. (1957), SEROTONIN-LSD INTERACTIONS. Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences, 66: 643–648.</ref> |
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Revision as of 19:20, 12 December 2012
Sir John Henry Gaddum FRS (31 March 1900 - 30 June 1965) was an English pharmacologist. He was educated at Rugby School and Trinity College, Cambridge. He became professor of pharmacology at the University of Cairo. Subsequent to this he took up a chair at University College London. He later worked at Porton Down. He is best remembered for his classic work "Gaddum's Pharmacology". He is the first scientist postulated that 5-HT might have a role in mood regulation.[1]
References
- ^ Gaddum, J. H. (1957), SEROTONIN-LSD INTERACTIONS. Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences, 66: 643–648.
External links
- "Royal Society: Gaddum, Sir John Henry (1900-1965)". AIM25. Retrieved 2006-05-19.
- "Gaddum Papers". The Royal Society. Retrieved 2007-03-01.