Loewi was born on June 3, 1873, in Frankfurt-am-Main. From Wordnik.com. [Otto Loewi - Biography] Reference
Germany, the son of Jacob Loewi, a merchant, and Anna. From Wordnik.com. [Otto Loewi - Biography] Reference
It was here that he met his lifelong friend, Otto Loewi. From Wordnik.com. [Sir Henry Dale - Biography] Reference
Dale & Loewi (1936) chemical transmission of the nerve impulses. From Wordnik.com. [The Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine, 1901-2000] Reference
In 1902 Loewi also spent some months in Starling's laboratory, in. From Wordnik.com. [Otto Loewi - Biography] Reference
Since his schooldays, Loewi showed keen interest in the humanities. From Wordnik.com. [Otto Loewi - Biography] Reference
Professor Loewi himself, to assume its identity with acetylcholine. From Wordnik.com. [Sir Henry Dale - Nobel Lecture] Reference
Loewi showed that impulse transmission takes place by chemical means. From Wordnik.com. [The Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine 1970 - Presentation Speech] Reference
Loewi tested his hypothesis by placing a second heart in the solution. From Wordnik.com. [How the Mind Works: Revelations] Reference
It was as Professor in Graz that Loewi cultivated his gifts as a lecturer. From Wordnik.com. [Otto Loewi - Biography] Reference
When the Germans invaded Austria in 1938, Loewi was forced to leave his homeland. From Wordnik.com. [Otto Loewi - Biography] Reference
Loewi bathed a frog's heart in saline solution and stimulated the nerve that normally slows the heartbeat. From Wordnik.com. [How the Mind Works: Revelations] Reference
In 1905 Loewi became Associate Professor at Meyer's laboratory, and in 1909 he wass appointed to the Chair of. From Wordnik.com. [Otto Loewi - Biography] Reference
After his return to Marburg in 1902 Loewi continued to study the function of the kidney and the mechanism of the action of diuretics. From Wordnik.com. [Otto Loewi - Biography] Reference
You, Professor Loewi, first succeeded in establishing proof of such transmission and in determining the nature of the effective substances. From Wordnik.com. [Physiology or Medicine 1936 - Presentation Speech] Reference
There was, in this respect, a complete analogy with the paralysing effect of atropine on the action of the heart vagus, which, as Loewi and. From Wordnik.com. [Sir Henry Dale - Nobel Lecture] Reference
Loewi rushed down to his laboratory, where he proceeded to prove the reality of the dream -- an accomplishment which led to the Nobel Prize. From Wordnik.com. [LSD and the Third Eye] Reference
But Loewi carried out instead a model analysis, using those activities which were obtained in the living organism under changing conditions. From Wordnik.com. [Physiology or Medicine 1936 - Presentation Speech] Reference
America Loewi came into close contact with many outstanding biologists from all over the world and here he found much inspiration for his work. From Wordnik.com. [Otto Loewi - Biography] Reference
Loewi continued his studies of carbohydrate metabolism, investigating among other things the conditions responsible for epinephrine hyperglycaemia. From Wordnik.com. [Otto Loewi - Biography] Reference
Professor Loewi has mentioned the evidence for such storage of acetylcholine, waiting for liberation, at parasympathetic nerve endings; and Brown and. From Wordnik.com. [Sir Henry Dale - Nobel Lecture] Reference
Loewi named the substance released by the relevant nerve, called the vagus nerve, Vagusstoff; today it is known as the neurotransmitter acetylcholine. From Wordnik.com. [How the Mind Works: Revelations] Reference
Otto Loewi and Henry Dale demonstrated, in work gaining them a Nobel Prize, that nerve impulses released small amounts of highly active substances at the nerve endings. From Wordnik.com. [Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine 1957 - Presentation Speech] Reference
After considerable work, Loewi was able to determine the nature of this substance too, and to prove that the parasympathetic substance was identical with acetylcholine. From Wordnik.com. [Physiology or Medicine 1936 - Presentation Speech] Reference
Loewi and I first met as young men, some 35 years ago, in the. From Wordnik.com. [Sir Henry Dale - Banquet Speech] Reference
Frankfurt, Loewi being then in Marburg with Hans Horst Meyer, who still sustains his weight of honoured years. From Wordnik.com. [Sir Henry Dale - Banquet Speech] Reference
Physiological Union Travel Award, 1961; Otto Loewi Memorial. From Wordnik.com. [Julius Axelrod - Biography] Reference
Professor Loewi became an American citizen in. From Wordnik.com. [Otto Loewi - Biography] Reference
Otto Loewi - Nobel Lecture. From Wordnik.com. [Otto Loewi - Nobel Lecture] Reference
O. Loewi, Pflügers Arch. Ges. From Wordnik.com. [Otto Loewi - Nobel Lecture] Reference
Sir Henry Dale, Professor Otto Loewi. From Wordnik.com. [Physiology or Medicine 1936 - Presentation Speech] Reference
E. Engelhart and O. Loewi, Arch. Intern. From Wordnik.com. [Otto Loewi - Nobel Lecture] Reference
O. Loewi and E. Navratil, Pflügers Arch. Ges. From Wordnik.com. [Otto Loewi - Nobel Lecture] Reference
A. Fröhlich and O. Loewi, Arch.Exptl. Pathol. From Wordnik.com. [Otto Loewi - Nobel Lecture] Reference
Otto Loewi. From Wordnik.com. [Sir Henry Dale - Biography] Reference
1936 - Otto Loewi. From Wordnik.com. [magic-city-news.com] Reference
1936 – Otto Loewi. From Wordnik.com. [Matthew Yglesias » Presidential Trouble] Reference
Otto Loewi - Biography. From Wordnik.com. [Otto Loewi - Biography] Reference
1936 - Sir Henry Dale, Otto Loewi. From Wordnik.com. [All Nobel Laureates in Medicine] Reference
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