Helen D. Zepp

American medical researcher From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Helen Dorothy Zepp (June 28, 1903 – March 18, 1994) was an American medical researcher based in Baltimore and later in New York City. She did research on viruses and vaccines, including polio and herpes.

Born(1903-06-28)June 28, 1903
Maryland, U.S.
DiedMarch 18, 1994(1994-03-18) (aged 90)
New York, U.S.
OccupationsMedical researcher, bacteriologist
Quick facts Born, Died ...
Helen D. Zepp
A young white woman with bobbed wavy dark hair, in an oval frame
Helen D. Zepp, from the 1927 yearbook of Goucher College
Born(1903-06-28)June 28, 1903
Maryland, U.S.
DiedMarch 18, 1994(1994-03-18) (aged 90)
New York, U.S.
OccupationsMedical researcher, bacteriologist
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Early life and education

Zepp was born in Maryland, the daughter of Dorry R. Zepp and Jane (Jennie) Ethel Cridler Zepp.[1] She graduated from Goucher College in 1926.[2]

Career

Zepp worked at the Philadelphia Hospital for Contagious Diseases after college.[3] She worked at the Harriet Lane Home of Johns Hopkins Hospital, and at Sydenham Hospital in Baltimore, in the 1940s.[4] In 1949, she moved with her collaborator Horace L. Hodes[5] to become assistant to the director of pediatrics at Mount Sinai Hospital in New York City.[6] There, she was part of the team that devised a simple polio immunity test in 1957.[7] "It seems to me that my life is one white mouse after another," she reported to the Goucher alumnae magazine in 1954.[6]

Publications

Zepp was co-author on articles that appeared in JAMA,[3] Science,[8] Nature,[9] The Journal of Pediatrics,[10] and Experimental Biology and Medicine.[11]

  • "Salmonella Suipestifer Infections in Man" (1933, with Ann G. Kuttner)[3]
  • "Development of antibody following vaccination of infants and children against pneumococci" (1944, with Horace L. Hodes and James F. Ziegler Jr.)[4]
  • "New Method for Detection of Human Poliomyelitis Antibodies" (1957, with Horace L. Hodes, Walter L. Henley, and Ruth Berger)[8]
  • "A Physical Property as a Virus Marker: Difference in Avidity of Cellulose Resin for Virulent (Mahoney) and Attenuated (LSc, 2ab) Strain of Type 1 Poliovirus" (1960, with Horace L. Hodes and Eugene A. Ainbender)[12]
  • "Enhancement of Resistance in Mice to Staphylococcal Infection by Preliminary Treatment with a Staphylococcal Extract" (1961, with Alfred L. Florman, Jeanne L. Scoma, and Eugene Ainbender)[13]
  • "The Difference in Elutability of Poliovirus and SV40 from a DEAE Column" (1962, with Eugene Ainbender and Horace L. Hodes)[14]
  • "Radioautographic Studies of Poliovirus Binding by Human Immunoglobulins" (1965, with Eugene Ainbender, Ruth Berger, M. Magda Hevizy, and Horace L. Hodes)[11]
  • "Study of Viral Antibodies by the Paper-Radioactive Virus Method" (1966, with H. L. Hodes, E. Ainbender, R. Berger, and M. M. Hevizy)[15]
  • "An antibiotic against herpes virus" (1966, with H. L. Hodes, I. H. Leopold, and S. Sherman)[16]
  • "Production of O and H agglutinins by a newborn infant infected with Salmonella st. paul" (1966, with Horace L. Hodes, Eugene Ainbender, Ruth Berger, M. Magda Hevizy)[10]
  • "Demonstration of IgA Polioantibody in Saliva, Duodenal Fluid and Urine" (1967, with Ruth Berger, Eugene Ainbender, Horace L. Hodes, and M. Magda Hevizy)[9]
  • "Human-mosquito somatic cell hybrids induced by ultraviolet-inactivated sendai virus" (1971, with J. H. Conover, K. Hirschhorn, and H. L. Hodes)[17]
  • "Production of human-mosquito somatic cell hybrids and their response to virus infection" (1971, with James H. Conover, Kurt Hirschhorn, and Horace L. Hodes)[18]

References

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