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High Quality Content by WIKIPEDIA articles! Sahachir Hata ( Hata Sahachir , March 23, 1873 November 22, 1938) was a Japanese bacteriologist who developed the Arsphenamine drug in 1909 in the laboratory of Paul Ehrlich. Hata was born in Tsumo Village, Mino District, Shimane (now part of Masuda City, and completed his medical education in Kyoto. He studied epidemic diseases under the famous Dr Kitasato Shibasabur at Kitasato's Institute for the Study of Infectious Diseases in Tokyo, and later studied immunology at the Robert Koch Institute in Berlin. While in Germany, he took the opportunity to…mehr

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High Quality Content by WIKIPEDIA articles! Sahachir Hata ( Hata Sahachir , March 23, 1873 November 22, 1938) was a Japanese bacteriologist who developed the Arsphenamine drug in 1909 in the laboratory of Paul Ehrlich. Hata was born in Tsumo Village, Mino District, Shimane (now part of Masuda City, and completed his medical education in Kyoto. He studied epidemic diseases under the famous Dr Kitasato Shibasabur at Kitasato's Institute for the Study of Infectious Diseases in Tokyo, and later studied immunology at the Robert Koch Institute in Berlin. While in Germany, he took the opportunity to learn about chemotherapy at the German National Institute for Experimental Therapeutics in Frankfurt, where he assisted Paul Ehrlich in the discovery of arsphenamine, which proved effective in curing syphilis. It was called Salvarsan 606 because it was the 606th drug that Ehrlich tried.