Johannes Rudolph Hint was born in Kuusnõmme, a small fishing village in the west of Saaremaa island, Estonia, on 20 September 1914.
The Disintegrator processed the mixture by fine grinding and mechanical activation of material components with water, which further strengthened autoclave effects.
Especially, popular were food preparations that contained bio-active substances, which although sometimes regarded as "quack remedies" were distributed, not only across the Soviet Union, but also to the western world.
The medical qualities and effects of two of the preparations, AU-8 (for internal use) and L-1 (for external application), were identified, after, Johannes Hint had been rehabilitated and production had been stopped.
At a later date, these preparations were widely acknowledged as food preservatives, as journalist Siim Kallas confirmed in his 1988 article published in "Rahva Hääl", since similar biological samples, heralded the nutrition therapy boom in the west, a few years later.
The result of the highly political court case found him guilty of abuse of office, and sentenced to prison for 15 years.
Hint's national prizes, rewards and honors including scientific degrees and title were annulled, and all his possessions were confiscated, as the result of the court ruling.
Hint's titles of honors and scientific degrees were fully rehabilitated, and some of his confiscated possessions were returned posthumously.