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  1. 16 de ene. de 2018 · He challenged his head chemist, Harold Watkins, to make a sweet, liquid form of sulfanilamide. After much experimentation, Watkins found that a solvent, diethylene glycol, could dissolve...

  2. www.fda.gov › about-fda › histories-product-regulationSulfanilamide Disaster | FDA

    The company's chief chemist and pharmacist, Harold Cole Watkins, experimented and found that sulfanilamide would dissolve in diethylene glycol. The company control lab tested the mixture for...

  3. 13 de mar. de 2015 · Watkins’ Lethal Elixir. On September 27, 1937, Susie Mae DeLoach caught her leg on a strip of barbed wire. The wound festered, and the infection spread, eventually reaching her heart. None of the remedies DeLoach’s doctor recommended seemed to have any effect. And by the time her family called Dr. Johnston Peeples for a second opinion, she ...

  4. View the profiles of people named Harold Watkins. Join Facebook to connect with Harold Watkins and others you may know. Facebook gives people the power...

  5. DEG is poisonous to humans and other mammals, but Harold Watkins, the company's chief pharmacist and chemist, was not aware of this.

  6. A coroner’s verdict was reserved today in the death of Harold Cole Watkins, chemist who prepared the formula for elixir of sulfanilamide which was blamed for the deaths of 67 persons in 1937. Watkins, 58, was found dead of a bullet wound through the heart at his home. .

  7. Harold Cole Watkins, fue un químico y farmacéutico responsable por la creación del elixir de sulfanilamida que mató a más de cien personas durante septiembre y octubre de 1937 en Estados Unidos. [1]