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The First Human Heart Transplant and Further Advances in Cardiac Transplantation at Groote Schuur Hospital and the University of Cape Town
Brink, J. G; Hassoulas, J.
  • Brink, J. G; s.af
  • Hassoulas, J; s.af
Article in English | AIM | ID: biblio-1260397
Responsible library: CG1.1
ABSTRACT
Christiaan (Chris) Barnard was born in 1922 and qualified in medicine at the University of Cape Town in 1946. Following surgical training in South Africa and the USA; Barnard established a successful open-heart surgery programme at Groote Schuur Hospital and the University of Cape Town in 1958. In 1967; he led the team that performed the world's first human-to-human heart transplant. The article describing this remarkable achievement was published in the South African Medical Journal just three weeks after the event and is one of the most cited articles in the cardiovascular field. In the lay media as well; this first transplant remains the most publicised event in world medical history. Although the first heart transplant patient survived only 18 days; four of Groote Schuur Hospital's first 10 patients survived for more than one year; two living for 13 and 23 years; respectively. This relative success amid many failures worldwide did much to generate guarded optimism that heart transplantation would eventually become a viable therapeutic option. This first heart transplant and subsequent ongoing research in cardiac transplantation at the University of Cape Town and in a few other dedicated centres over the subsequent 15 years laid the foundation for heart transplantation to become a well-established form of therapy for end-stage cardiac disease. During this period from 1968 to 1983; Chris Barnard and his team continued to make major contributions to organ transplantation; notably the development of the heterotopic ('piggy-back') heart transplants; advancing the concept of brain death; organ donation and other related ethical issues; better preservation and protection of the donor heart (including hypothermic perfusion storage of the heart; studies on the haemodynamic and metabolic effects of brain death; and even early attempts at xenotransplantation
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Index: AIM (Africa) Main subject: Teaching / Humans / Heart Transplantation / Biomedical Enhancement / Hospitals Language: English Journal: Cardiovasc. j. Afr. (Online) Year: 2009 Type: Article

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Index: AIM (Africa) Main subject: Teaching / Humans / Heart Transplantation / Biomedical Enhancement / Hospitals Language: English Journal: Cardiovasc. j. Afr. (Online) Year: 2009 Type: Article