Ernst Moro
Ernst Moro was a Slovenian physician and pediatrician who was the first in western medicine to describe an infant reflex that was named after him.
Career
Moro studied medicine at the University of Graz, Austria, getting his M.D. in 1899. From 1901 to 1902 he worked with Theodor Escherich in Vienna, the discoverer of the Escherichia coli bacterium. He earned his habilitation in pediatrics in Munich in 1906, and became a professor of pediatrics in the University of Heidelberg in 1911.Besides the Moro reflex, he also became known for the following:
- Proved the sterility of the normal small intestine.
- Discovered that breast-fed children have stronger bactericidal activity in their blood than bottle-fed ones.
- First described the irritable colon syndrome or recurrent abdominal pain in children
- Isolated the bacterium Lactobacillus acidophilus from the stomach of children, which is caused by the souring of milk products.
- Developed the Moro test.
- Coined the terms "first trimester" and "biological spring".
- Invented "Moro's milk", an infant-feeding formula composed by full cream milk with added 3% flour, 5% butter and 5-7% sugar.
- Invented Professor Moro's Carrot soup, which decreased the death rate of babies by diarrhea in Germany dramatically.
- Published about his later famous "apple diet" to cure diarrhea symptoms.
Professor Moro's Carrot Soup
In 1908, diarrhea killed many babies in Germany. Professor Moro, at that time the head of a children’s hospital in Heidelberg, found out by experiment that a simple carrot soup decreased the death rate of babies suffering from diarrhea by nearly 50%. The soup was made by cooking 500 grams of peeled and sliced carrots for one and a half hours in plenty of water, draining and puréeing. After cooking, 3 grams of salt were added, along with enough water until the soup pot contained a total of 1 liter of liquid.A German study published in 2002 outlines that acidic oligosaccharides formed in aqueous extracts from carrots may lead to less adherence of bacterial agents to the mucosal wall of the bowel, thus being a more effective treatment for acute gastrointestinal infections of children than glucose-electrolyte-solution oral rehydration.
In 2009, experiments showed that Professor Moro's Carrot Soup can treat diarrhea caused by antibiotic-resistant bacteria.