Peter Kosciusko Olitsky (August 20, 1886, New York City – July 20, 1964, Greenwich, Connecticut) was an American physician, pathologist, and microbiologist. He gained an international reputation as a pioneer in virology
Olitsky was a pioneer in research on neurotropic viruses, especially poliomyelitis. He did considerable research on arthropod-borne viruses and their pathogenic effects in mammalian diseases.[2] As one of Harry Plotz's collaborators, he did research on typhus.[3] Olitsky investigated epidemic diseases of viral or rickettsial origin in Mexico from 1916 to 1917,[1] in China in 1918,[4] in Europe from 1925 to 1926, in Bermuda in 1927, in Switzerland in 1930, and in Egypt in 1933.[1] In 1916 Olitsky and Dr. Carlos E. Husk,[5] as members of an expedition sent by the Rockefeller Foundation to help against a typhus epidemic in Mexico, both became sick with typhus fever. Husk died on March 20, 1916.[6] Olitsky's research in Bermuda might have been, in part, a vacation.[7] He did important research on the bacteriological cultivation of tobacco mosaic virus.[8] In the 1920s, he, in collaboration with Frederick L. Gates (1853–1929), erroneously suggested that Bacterium pneumosintes (now called Dialister pneumosintes) causes influenza.[9][10][11] In the 1930s, Albert Sabin and Peter Olitsky succeeded in using human brain cell tissue cultures to culture poliomyelitis virus.[12] In the late 1930s, Sabin and Olitsky coauthored a considerable number of papers.[13][14][15][16][17][18][19][20] According to Irwin W. Sherman, Olitsky regarded Sabin as a genius.[21] At the Rockefeller Institute for Medical Research, Olitsky's laboratory provided training for many notable polio researchers, including Jordi Casals i Ariet, Herald R. Cox, Isabel Morgan, Albert Sabin, R. Walter Schlesinger (1914–2003), and Jerome T. Syverton.[22]
He was the second husband of Frances Kidder Olitsky (1889–1994). Her first husband was George Prentiss Tubby (1886–1915), the father of [[
Roger Wellington Tubby]] and Louise Tubby. Peter and Frances Olitsky were married in 1920 and had a daughter, Ruth Kidder Olitsky, who married the historian Nicolai Rubinstein.[24][2]
Olitsky, P. K. (1939). "Viral Effect Produced by Intestinal Contents of Normal Mice and of Those Having Spontaneous Encephalomyelitis". Experimental Biology and Medicine. 41 (2): 434–437. doi:10.3181/00379727-41-10701. S2CID88301042.
Olitsky, P. K.; Tal, C. (1952). "Acute Disseminated Encephalomyelitis Produced in Mice by Brain Proteolipide (Folch-Lees)". Experimental Biology and Medicine. 79 (1): 50–53. doi:10.3181/00379727-79-19269. PMID14892035. S2CID21977865.
^Olitsky, Peter K.; Denzer, Bernard S.; Husk, Carlos E. (1916). "The Etiology of Typhus Fever in Mexico (Tabardillo)". Journal of the American Medical Association. LXVI (22): 1692–1693. doi:10.1001/jama.1916.02580480026012.
^Sabin, A. B.; Olitsky, P. K. (1936). "Cultivation of Poliomyelitis Virus in vitro in Human Embryonic Nervous Tissue". Experimental Biology and Medicine. 34 (3): 357–359. doi:10.3181/00379727-34-8619C. S2CID88316399.
^Sabin, Albert B.; Olitsky, Peter K. (1937). "The Olfactory Bulbs in Experimental Poliomyelitis". Journal of the American Medical Association. 108: 21. doi:10.1001/jama.1937.02780010023005.
^Sabin, A. B.; Olitsky, P. K. (1938). "Variations in Pathways by Which Equine Encephalomyelitic Viruses Invade the GNS of Mice and Guinea-pigs". Experimental Biology and Medicine. 38 (4): 595–597. doi:10.3181/00379727-38-9948p. S2CID86957184.
^Benison, Saul (1994). "Book Review: Dirt and Diseasee: Polio Before FDR by Naomi Rogers". Journal of the History of Medicine and Allied Sciences. 49 (2): 302–306. doi:10.1093/jhmas/49.2.302. p. 306