Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Albert Z. Kapikian, prominent NIH virologist, dies at 83

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Albert Z. Kapikian, prominent NIH virologist, dies at 83

    Washington Post
    March 22 2014


    Albert Z. Kapikian, prominent National Institutes of Health
    virologist, dies at 83

    By Emily Langer, Saturday, March 22, 3:05 AM E-mail the writer

    Albert Z. Kapikian, a virologist who helped lead important advances in
    the understanding of gastrointestinal illnesses that strike
    populations around the world -- particularly children -- died Feb. 24 at
    a rehabilitation center in Potomac, Md. He was 83.

    The cause was congestive heart failure, said his wife, Catherine Kapikian.

    Dr. Kapikian was a prominent researcher at the National Institute of
    Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID), a division of the National
    Institutes of Health in Bethesda, Md., and served for more than four
    decades as chief of the epidemiology section in the laboratory of
    infectious diseases.

    He had joined NIH in 1957 as an officer of the U.S. Public Health
    Service and dedicated nearly his entire career to the study of viruses
    that can lead to an upset stomach in mild cases -- and to death in
    severe ones.

    In 1972, Dr. Kapikian used cutting-edge electron microscope technology
    to identify the Norwalk virus, an agent named for the town in Ohio
    where in 1968 it sickened more than 100 elementary school students and
    their teachers.

    The Norwalk virus is considered the first identified norovirus. Common
    and highly contagious, the norovirus is particularly dangerous in
    crowded environments such as day-care centers, college dormitories,
    military bases and cruise ships, said Stephen J. Chanock, an NIH
    infectious disease expert. Symptoms can include stomach discomfort,
    nausea, diarrhea and vomiting.

    The year after his norovirus breakthrough, Dr. Kapikian and several
    colleagues were credited with identifying the virus that causes
    hepatitis A, a form of liver disease.

    He was perhaps best known for his study of the rotavirus, which the
    World Health Organization describes as a leading cause of severe
    diarrheal disease and dehydration in infants and young children
    worldwide.

    "It's a very egalitarian virus," Dr. Kapikian once told The Washington
    Post. "It infects children equally in developed countries as well as
    developing countries. Sanitary conditions don't seem to matter."

    Limited medical care in poor countries, however, makes the rotavirus
    particularly threatening in those areas. It is estimated to cause
    400,000 deaths or more per year.

    Dr. Kapikian led the team of researchers that created and patented the
    first rotavirus vaccine to be licensed in the United States, according
    to NIH. To create the vaccine, Dr. Kapikian combined a monkey
    rotavirus with elements from several strains of human rotavirus.

    The vaccine was approved by the Food and Drug Administration in 1998
    but later was withdrawn because of an apparent association with rare
    cases of bowel obstruction. Dr. Kapikian continued pursuing research
    on rotavirus vaccines, and today two such vaccines are available.

    "Al Kapikian was a giant in the field of virology," Anthony S. Fauci,
    the NIAID director, said in a statement released on Dr. Kapikian's
    death. "His seminal basic and clinical research contributions to the
    study of viruses and to vaccine development have had an enormous
    global impact."

    Albert Zaven Kapikian was born May 9, 1930, in the Bronx to Armenian
    immigrants. He considered joining a seminary before choosing to pursue
    a career in the medical sciences.

    In 1952, he received a bachelor's degree in history from New York's
    Queens College, where he was a pitcher on the baseball team. Four
    years later, he received a medical degree from Cornell University.

    Dr. Kapikian was in the Public Health Service until retiring at the
    rank of captain. He traveled worldwide for his medical work, his wife
    said, and remained associated with NIH as a consultant after his
    retirement in 2012. In addition to his work on the norovirus and the
    rotavirus, he did extensive research on the common cold.

    His honors included the Sabin Vaccine Institute's Albert B. Sabin Gold
    Medal, an honor named for the renowned polio researcher.

    Dr. Kapikian was a Rockville, Md., resident. Survivors include his
    wife of 54 years, Catherine Andrews Kapikian of Rockville; three sons,
    Albert K. Kapikian and Thomas F. Kapikian, both of Silver Spring, Md.,
    and Gregory B. Kapikian of Annapolis; a brother; and two grandsons.

    http://www.washingtonpost.com/local/obituaries/albert-z-kapikian-prominent-national-institutes-of-health-virologist-dies-at-83/2014/03/21/db51e0ce-a57a-11e3-a5fa-55f0c77bf39c_story.html

Working...
X