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・ Alexander Winterberger
・ Alexander Winton
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・ Alexander Wolcott
・ Alexander Wolf
・ Alexander Wolfe
・ Alexander Wolff
・ Alexander Wolff (soldier)
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Alexander Wood (physician)
・ Alexander Wood (physicist)
・ Alexander Wood (soccer)
・ Alexander Wood (surgeon)
・ Alexander Wood Renton
・ Alexander Woollcott
・ Alexander Workman
・ Alexander Wortley
・ Alexander Wrabetz
・ Alexander Wright
・ Alexander Wright (American football)
・ Alexander Wright (VC)
・ Alexander Wunderer
・ Alexander Wurz
・ Alexander Wyclif Reed


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Alexander Wood (physician) : ウィキペディア英語版
Alexander Wood (physician)

Alexander Wood (10 December 181726 February 1884), was a Scottish physician. He invented the first true hypodermic syringe.
==Life==

The son of Dr James Wood and his wife Mary Wood (his cousin), Alexander was born on 10 December 1817 in Cupar, Fife, and educated at Edinburgh Academy and Edinburgh University (MD 1839).
In 1853, he invented the first hypodermic needle that used a true syringe and hollow needle. His biographer and brother-in-law, the Very Rev Thomas Brown (1811-1893), wrote that Wood had taken the sting of the bee as his model. Brown also wrote, 'At first this new hypodermic method was employed exclusively for the administration of morphia and preparations of opium, but it is important to note that, from the outset, Dr Wood pointed to a far wider application.' In referring to the preface of a paper on '"New Method of Treating Neuralgia by Subcutaneous Injection," separately published in 1855', Brown quotes Wood as saying, 'In all probability, what is true in regard to narcotics would be found to be equally true in regard to other classes of remedies.' He was elected President of the Royal College of Physicians of Edinburgh in 1858. 〔 (【引用サイトリンク】title=Some (mostly Scottish) local anaesthetic heroes )
There is a story in circulation that Wood's wife, Rebecca Massey, was the first known intravenous morphine addict and died of an overdose delivered by her husband's invention, however, Richard Davenport-Hines says, 'It is a myth: she outlived him, and survived until 1894.'
Wood is buried with his wife in Dean Cemetery in Edinburgh. The grave lies on an east-facing section of the obscured southern terrace. The gravestone corroborates the date of his wife's death.

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