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Medicine Science

Michael DeBakey, Consummate Medical Geek, Dead At 99 142

NIckGorton writes "Dr. Michael DeBakey, the father of modern heart surgery, died this week at age 99. He was integral to the development of pretty much everything in modern cardiovascular surgery: bypass (heart-lung machines that made open-heart surgery possible for the first time), coronary artery bypass surgery (he did the first one ever), carotid endarterectomey (again he performed the first one), the development of Dacron graft blood vessels, and the development of MASH units. He was a consummate geek and numerous surgical instruments bear his name. He was also the first surgeon to videotape surgeries — in the 1960s. He was considered by the NEJM to be the single greatest surgeon alive until two days ago. In his career he performed over 50,000 heart surgeries and practiced medicine (though not surgery) until the day he died. In 2005 he underwent the Debakey procedure, which he pioneered, to treat the aortic dissection he suffered."
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Michael DeBakey, Consummate Medical Geek, Dead At 99

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  • Awesome Man (Score:5, Insightful)

    by EdIII ( 1114411 ) * on Sunday July 13, 2008 @07:12PM (#24176013)

    That man was truly awesome. I don't believe in the Christian god, but I don't believe in a black void either. Wherever he went I hope it's everything he deserves and I pray for that.

    What an incredible contribution to science and medical technology. The number of lives that man had affected with his work.

    50,000 heart surgeries? That is tireless work. If he started at 30 and worked till the day he died, that is about 2 surgeries a day. He was unable to perform surgery for the last part of his life, so it was more like 3-5 surgeries a day. That's over 50,000 people that got to live longer with their families because of him DIRECTLY. How many other people survived because of his advancements? Millions? probably, and possibly more than that.

    This man was truly awesome in every sense of the word, and inspiring to others. Anybody working in any scientific field hopes to make such a contribution to the world.

    May he rest in piece.

    • Re:Awesome Man (Score:5, Insightful)

      by Simpsoid ( 1087767 ) on Sunday July 13, 2008 @07:26PM (#24176099)
      I too don't believe in any god's, but may god rest his soul. Men and women like this are truely an asset to humanity and the human race. It's dedication like this to the sciences and arts that really makes the human spirit shine. So wherever you are Dr. DeBakey, I hope you are in peace.
      • Anyone who believes in God should try and get Dr. DeBakey sainted. He performed many miracles, and dedicated his life to saving others. Aside from the grudge he shared with Dr. Denton Cooley, he lived his life in a morally upstanding way (he was only married twice, never getting divorced). I was going to say that they just don't make men like him anymore but I'm sure there is another DeBakey in a hospital basement somewhere chugging along researching new things.

    • by Anonymous Coward

      I told him if he kept that up, he'd never make 100. I was right.

    • Re: (Score:1, Offtopic)

      by FudRucker ( 866063 )
      if there is a God i bet he dont like karma whores either :D
      • if there is a God i bet he dont like karma whores either :D

        God IS a karma whore, you ignorant clod!

        • if there is a God i bet he dont like karma whores either :D

          God IS a karma whore, you ignorant clod!

          OK. OK. I always wanted to do this.

          In Soviet Russia, God karma whores you!

          Thank you. Thank you. I'll be here all week. Be sure to tip your waitresses. Great bunch a gals. Say "Hi" Gina!

          On topic note:

          Although the article never mentioned the cause of death.
          Could he have died from . . .heart failure?

          • Pretty much everyone has the same cause of death if you think about it - lack of oxygen to the brain ...
        • RE:"God IS a karma whore"

          hey! your right!
    • Re:Awesome Man (Score:5, Insightful)

      by Kamokazi ( 1080091 ) on Sunday July 13, 2008 @08:35PM (#24176449)
      I agree...not a god person here either, but if there is any sort of afterlife he deserves the very best. Mark my grandfather under the millions he indirectly affected. He is still alive thanks in no small part to this man's work. I knew of him, but had no idea he performed that many surgeries on his own. Simply astounding. The saddest part is, more people will remember idiots like G. W. Bush than this man.
      • by dkf ( 304284 )

        The saddest part is, more people will remember idiots like G. W. Bush than this man.

        Too soon to tell if that'll really be the case. (Will Dubya be remembered as a monumental failure, or will he just be something for political historians? Will DeBakey be properly remembered for his achievements, or fall into obscurity and only mentioned to those in the medical profession? If both fall out of general knowledge, which will be more widely known?) Come back in another few hundred years, maybe a thousand, and we'll see.

    • Re:Awesome Man (Score:5, Informative)

      by yorugua ( 697900 ) on Sunday July 13, 2008 @09:09PM (#24176593)

      Look at this at the Wikipedia. This guy was really something. May he rest in peace, wherever he is. And thank you.

      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Michael_DeBakey

      Honors

      * Lifetime Achievement Awards from the Academy of Medical Films

      * American Heart Association (AHA)

      * Children Uniting Nations

      * Encyclopaedia Britannica

      * Foundation for Biomedical Research

      * International College of Angiology

      * International Health and Medical Film Festival

      * Research! America

      * Tulane Medical Alumni Association

      * U.S. Army Legion of Merit (1945)

      * American Medical Association Hektoen Gold Medal (1954 and 1970)

      * Rudolph Matas Award in Vascular Surgery (1954)

      * International Society of Surgery Distinguished Service Award (1958)

      * Leriche Award (1959)

      * American Medical Association Distinguished Service Award (1959)

      * Albert Lasker Award for Clinical Medical Research (1963)

      * American Medical Association Billings Gold Medal Exhibit Award (1967)

      * American Heart Association Gold Heart Award (1968)

      * Union of Soviet Socialist Republics Academy of Sciences 50th Anniversary Jubilee Medal (1973)

      * Russian Academy of Medical Sciences Foreign Member (1974)

      * Veterans of Foreign Wars Commander-in-Chiefâ(TM)s Medal and Citation (1980)

      * American Surgical Association Distinguished Service Award (1981)

      * Academy of Surgical Research Markowitz Award (1988)

      * Association of American Medical Colleges Special Recognition Award (1988)

      * American Legion Distinguished Service Award (1990)

      * Premio Giuseppe Corradi Award for Surgery and Scientific Research (1997)

      * Russian Military Medical Academy, Boris Petrovsky International Surgeons Award and First Laureate of the Boris Petrovsky Gold Medal (1997)

      * John P. McGovern Compleat Physician Award (1999)

      * Russian Academy of Sciences Foreign Member (1999)

      * Texas Senate and House of Representatives, Adoption of resolutions honoring Dr. DeBakey for 50 years of medical practice in Texas (1999)

      * American Medical Association Virtual Mentor Award (2000)

      * American Philosophical Society Jonathan Rhoads Medal (2000)

      * Library of Congress Bicentennial Living Legend Award (2000)

      * Villanova University Mendel Medal Award (2001)

      * Houston Hall of Fame (2001)

      * NASA Invention of the Year Award (2001)

      * MUSC[1] "Lindbergh-Carrel Prize"[2](2002)

      * Congressional Gold Medal (April 23, 2008)

      • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

        by wazza ( 16772 )

        From the Wikipedia page:

        and in 1953 he performed the first successful carotid endarterectomy.

        This man is a brilliant bloke, and a bit of a bloody legend.

        I've never met the man, but because of only one of the things he pioneered, I can tell people who've just found out - after I've done an ultrasound - they've got an 80-99% blockage of their carotid artery, that they can have a short, straightforward surgery and have an excellent chance of not having any side-effects.

        This beats the daylights out of having a

    • Just 1 more year, and he would have become a centenarian. (100 yr old). Too bad.

    • Re: (Score:2, Informative)

      by Anonymous Coward

      If he started at 30 and worked till the day he died, that is about 2 surgeries a day. He was unable to perform surgery for the last part of his life, so it was more like 3-5 surgeries a day.

      DeBakey started performing surgery in his late twenties and continued to perform heart surgery well into his 90s - his pace deteriorated until about 2003-04, when health conditions forced him to stop.

      To put that in perspective, he performed heart surgery for more than 60 years. He practiced medicine for about 75 years.

      How many of you have lived half that long?

    • by artgeeq ( 969931 )

      What a giant of a human being.

      On another note, what really struck me this weekend was how the cable networks spent so much time covering Tony Snow, who passed on around the same time, and barely mentioned Dr. DeBakey. He got a lot more coverage in the Houston, Texas press.

  • Welcome back. (Score:3, Insightful)

    by gcnaddict ( 841664 ) on Sunday July 13, 2008 @07:14PM (#24176023)
    First comment since 2006 and this is what you post?

    I had the option of modding you down, but it felt more appropriate to bring this up instead.
    • Re: (Score:2, Funny)

      by nrgy ( 835451 )
      Comcast has been throttling his posts... This is the first to get through ;)
    • Ah, crap. (Score:3, Informative)

      by gcnaddict ( 841664 )
      Thanks, Slashdot. My post was aimed at Keyseir (968368, poster of the First Post. Seems like clicking Reply to This didn't really go as planned.

      Sorry about that. Feel free to mod down.
  • And Yet.... (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Anonymous Coward on Sunday July 13, 2008 @07:21PM (#24176055)

    I found it rather sad (or just perplexing) that his obit was overshadowed by the death of Tony Snow, a journalist.

    NBC News (Saturday) didn't even mention him at all, but did have a glowing 3+ piece on Snow.

    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      by Anonymous Coward

      Journalists take care of their own, just like politicians take care of their own when it comes to naming bridges, buildings, and streets. "Gee, that guy worked hard every day, he deserves to be honored for the next 200 years". Not to people outside that profession thoughs.

      I hope that when Dick Cheney passes away, some publications will have the good sense to report it as follows: "Former VP Richard Cheney passed away today. We extend our condolences to his family and friends. Now, let's move on."

      • I hope that when Dick Cheney passes away, some publications will have the good sense to report it as follows: "Former VP Richard Cheney passed away today. We extend our condolences to his family and friends. Now, let's move on."

        ...whereas, most of us just hope that he DOES pass away, as opposed to growing stronger with the Dark Side of the Force...

    • The public want their entertainment. People who are intelligent care about different things than do the vast mob of phucktards that comprise most of the population.

      Don't ever expect that to be different.

    • You mean how Princess Diane's death was covered up and down and Sister Theresa was hardly acknowledged? Or Paul Scofield's passing was largely ignored in the shadow of Heath Ledger's* death two months prior?

      Yeah, it hoses but at the same time we need to also consider that it's part of the business (yes, it's very much a business regardless of how they like to paint themselves) of reporting on the popular. Most people, including myself, knew little if anything about Dr. DeBakey. And besides, people who coul
    • by Yungoe ( 415568 )

      The media generally focuses on what they want you to think is important. While Snow's death is also a tragedy, I could see the argument that he did not contribute to the betterment of humanity as much as DeBakey. This was also illustrated when John Lee Hooker and Carrol O'Connor died on the same day. Hooker gave great contributions to music in the form of popularizing a new blues style and contributing to the development of rock and roll. O'Connor gave us Archie Bunker and other network trash. Guess wh

  • ... and numerous surgical instruments bear his name

    Doctor: Ahh, a new surgical instrument. Wonderful. What's it called, nurse?
    Nurse: A "Michael"
    Doctor: That's going to cause a bit of confusion, mind if we call it a Debakey?

  • Lived to 99 (Score:1, Insightful)

    by able1234au ( 995975 )
    Obviously, he must know something!
    • by BPPG ( 1181851 )
      Either that, or he helped himself to the special heart medicine that no one else knows about...
  • by Anonymous Coward on Sunday July 13, 2008 @08:04PM (#24176291)

    Little over a year ago I was almost run over by a Porsche in the Texas Medical Center that looked like it was being driven by the grim specter of geath. Turns out it was DeBakey. I was later told by a friend at Baylor College of Medicine that DeBakey was still practicing when he felt like it! What a stud. 97 years old (at the time), still practicing medicine, and still spry enough to terrorize rogue jay-walkers in his 911. Via con dios, old man.

  • I bet the guy even had the Healing Touch [youtube.com].
  • by fermion ( 181285 ) on Sunday July 13, 2008 @08:10PM (#24176319) Homepage Journal
    As a disclaimer, I grew up hearing about this man my entire life. I think that there a very few people who have done as much for Houston, for Texas, the United State, or the world, as he did.

    To put in a large perspective, for example, Texas crashed when oil crashed in the late 70's. In response, Texas diversified. DeBakey was one of a small number of people that truly drove that diversification, making Texas not only rich in oil, but rich in more long term wealth like research and cutting edge technology. He worked with innovations around him to help create what is now one of the greatest medical complexes in the world. Surely he worked with many other people, and many other tech workers, but he certainly was one of the people that kept texas from becoming a backwater, like so many other states that has not invested so much in the future.

    And speaking of the future, The High School for Health Professions is a public Houston Independent School District high school. It was not built in the suburbs or in the demographically acceptable area, like some special high schools. It used to be located on the ass end on the Texas Medical Center, but when the built it for real they made it accessible to a cross section of students. It is almost 1/3 asian, 1/3 black, and 1/3 Hispanic or white. Whites are low presumably because so few whites live in the area. The school is nearly 50% free or reduced lunch, nearly 10% at risk, which is good for a school where 1/3 of the students are GT and 2/3 are in honors classes. This is not a school where the elite train the elite. This is not a school where the faint of heart go for college prep knowing full well that they have legacy to get them into an ivy league school. This is a school where slightly above average kids can go to get educated, without having to deal with the losers who would waste the opportunity/

    This man did a lot, and has been recognized more than enough. But here is what rubs the geek side of me the wrong way. A man who boozes his way though life, swindles funding for projects that never quite succeed, and on a fluke gets elected president has an airport named after him, while someone like Debakey has spent his entire life helping people, does note. Not to be critical, but something seems not quite right.

    • Wrong Bush, dude. Airport's named after his dad.
    • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

      by Sanat ( 702 )

      I am sure that many identify with what you are saying.

      I though tend to detach from what seems to be the unfairness of life. Why does someone get 99 years and another only 18 years... the truth is that there is no true understanding.

      The Dalai Lama said (paraphrased)

      My friends will pass away

      My enemies will pass away

      My happiness and dreams will pass away

      My sorrows and failures will pass away

      I, and the reflection of that who I am, too will pass away

      • by iluvcapra ( 782887 ) on Sunday July 13, 2008 @09:23PM (#24176681)

        My friends will pass away
        My enemies will pass away
        My happiness and dreams will pass away
        My sorrows and failures will pass away
        I, and the reflection of that who I am, too will pass away

        Remarkable statement for a man that has been reincarnated over a dozen times...

        • Re: (Score:3, Funny)

          Hey, he didn't say permanently.

        • by Sanat ( 702 )

          Guess it is like the ship full of yoyo's that sank 600 times.

          "I, and the reflection of that who I am, too will pass away"

          The "I am" part is eternal. The "I" part is the personality and somewhat changes each lifetime.
          At best we get a dim reflection of who we truly are in each lifetime.

          I do believe though that Michael DeBakey most likely had a reflection as strong as anyone on Earth for he was truly remarkable in all aspects.

    • Don't forget the George W. Bush Sewage Plant. A rare honor indeed.

      http://presidentialmemorial.wordpress.com/ [wordpress.com]

  • by ohxten ( 1248800 )
    RIP. Thanks for saving a crapload of lives.
  • "Consummate geek" (Score:2, Insightful)

    by Otter ( 3800 )
    It's possible that DeBakey was indeed some sort of "geek", even a consummate one, but that's not indicated by anything mentioned here or in the link. I've never quite understood the logic by which anime-obsessed, Monty Python-incessantly-quoting dweebs attach themselves onto everyone else's technical achievements.
    • by exley ( 221867 ) on Sunday July 13, 2008 @08:30PM (#24176431) Homepage

      To me it felt more like the word "geek" was included just to justify it being on Slashdot and fend off some of the inevitable "WTF is this doing on Slashdot?" Posts. Both of which would be stupid, since this is science and technology related -- neither of which are off-topic here.

      "Geek" is such a nebulous term anyway. Anyone with sufficient interest in something can be considered a geek. Of course, around here, the word does have a certain connotation.

    • Re:"Consummate geek" (Score:4, Interesting)

      by Kingrames ( 858416 ) on Sunday July 13, 2008 @08:38PM (#24176471)

      Clearly you didn't read enough of the article.
      When he died, his hair was purple and he was wearing a shirt that said "+1 Shirt".

      • by maxume ( 22995 )

        I just figured he liked to snack on the stuff that he excised, especially for surgeries that had an audience.

      • by Otter ( 3800 )
        I'm glad I posted the original comment, both for your response itself and for the "interesting" mod it raked in.
    • Re:"Consummate geek" (Score:4, Interesting)

      by MrMista_B ( 891430 ) on Sunday July 13, 2008 @09:37PM (#24176767)

      Because, "anime-obsessed, Monty Python-incessantly-quoting dweebs" isn't the only definition of "geek", though it is a derogatory one.

      "Geek", as I understand the term, usually refers to someone who excels at, is fascinated by, and focuses on one particular thing, often though not always of a scientific or technical nature.

      However, in the case of the late, esteemed Michael DeBakey, perhaps "hacker" might be the more appropriate term, given the hands-on nature of his work - a hacker of the human body, in the best, most respectful sense of the term.

    • Re:"Consummate geek" (Score:5, Informative)

      by Anonymous Coward on Sunday July 13, 2008 @10:09PM (#24176961)

      So the proof isn't in the link. So what?

      He begged his parents to convince the library to let him check out the Encyclopedia Brittanica. He was a kid. His parents bought him a set, which he read, cover to cover, start to finish.

      He was fascinated with medicine. His father was a pharmacist, and when other kids his age were obsessing over the usual stuff - musicians, athletes, girls - he was plotting his course as a doctor - a detailed course: exactly what classes he'd take, where he'd go to college, how he'd get his degrees.

      He studied so hard that he finished his doctorate at the same time as his bachelor's. As a doctor, he completely immersed himself in his work and research as a doctor. Medicine was his job, his career, his hobby and his pastime. He loved the trivial details of his field to the point where he berated peers who didn't share the same appreciation (and, later, fired employees who cut sutures too long.)

      He worked 12-hour days because he wanted to, and he did it for 75 years because he wanted to.

      Here's a test: Enter an argument with the biggest ______ geek you can find about the best ______ in that topic. Take up a contrary argument and see how riled up s/he gets. Amplify it a few magnitudes and that's how DeBakey was about cardiology. Until maybe the last two years of his life, that's how he was with anything involving medicine.

      (Speaking of those last two years: he had them because he underwent a surgical procedure he developed himself some 30 years prior. Reusing old work to save his own life? Check. ;) )

      He was a wetware hacker in 1932, inventing the key component of the heart-lung pump - the device that enables open-heart surgery - as a 23-year-old college student. He hacked Dacron into artificial arteries using his wife's sewing machine. He invented one of the earliest artificial hearts and pioneered transplant science - all before the influences of computers, small-scale fabrication, simulation.

      Intellectual pursuit of trivia at the expense of social grace? Aggressive top-dog behavior among his peers, instinctual shyness outside of his element? A constant desire to tinker, to create, to improvise?

      Anyone, anyone, anyone who worked with DeBakey and knows the definition of the term "geek" would happily - and honorably - apply it to him, and strive to meet it. If anyone deserved it as an honorific, it's DeBakey. Consummate indeed, and we should all work to be half as deserving of the title in our fields.

      - former Baylor med student

      â Opposing view: He was also a decorated Army vet. He was a graceful statesman for medicine and public advocate for education. He was rarely out of shape, even when illness confined him to a wheelchair in his last months. He enjoyed media attention and had a large, active group of friends.

      He also married a hot actress half his age and drove a sports car to work every day until he couldn't drive himself anymore â" about age 96. But if you had his money and fame, hell, wouldn't you?

    • by fermion ( 181285 )
      The sad thing is that geek has become so related to electronic computing technology instead a general term for someone who is curious about how the world works, curious about how they can take common objects and make them do cool things, curious about read and writing about how to do interesting and cool things. There was a time when a geek would be a person who went into the kitchen, or out in the woods, or down to the beach, and instead of just "hanging out" would perform systematic exercises to figure o
    • I've never quite understood the logic by which anime-obsessed, Monty Python-incessantly-quoting dweebs attach themselves onto everyone else's technical achievements.

      I suspect the individual who submitted the article may have been using the old school meaning of the word "geek", as opposed to the meaning hijacked onto the word by anime-obsessed, Monty Python-incessantly-quoting dweebs.

  • His contribution will be felt for generations to come. My wife had some of his training.. He will be missed.
  • by Eric Wayte ( 4583 )

    Dr. DeBakey - http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Debakey [wikipedia.org]
    Prof. Farnsworth - http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hubert_J._Farnsworth [wikipedia.org]

  • by thewiz ( 24994 ) on Sunday July 13, 2008 @09:21PM (#24176655)

    I've had three open-heart surgeries due to Tetralogy of Fallot [wikipedia.org]. Shortly before my second surgery, I caught chicken pox from a classmate. The chicken pox trashed my immune system and I also had bacterial endocarditis, encephalitis, spinal meningitis, pneumonia, and Reyes Syndrome [wikipedia.org]. Dr. Denton Cooley did the surgery with Dr. DeBakey assisting. They cleaned the endocarditis out of my heart, by hand, put a porcine valve [wikipedia.org] in the aortic opening, and replace the badly infected dacron patch on my VSD [wikipedia.org].

    I'm going to miss him. :(

  • by Ihmhi ( 1206036 ) <i_have_mental_health_issues@yahoo.com> on Sunday July 13, 2008 @11:02PM (#24177221)

    ...where the fuck is his Presidential Medal of Freedom, but it turns out that he's already been awarded one [wikipedia.org] almost 50 years ago. His list of honors and accolades is huge:

    * Lifetime Achievement Awards from the Academy of Medical Films
    * American Heart Association (AHA)
    * Children Uniting Nations
    * Encyclopaedia Britannica
    * Foundation for Biomedical Research
    * International College of Angiology
    * International Health and Medical Film Festival
    * Research! America
    * Tulane Medical Alumni Association
    * U.S. Army Legion of Merit (1945)
    * American Medical Association Hektoen Gold Medal (1954 and 1970)
    * Rudolph Matas Award in Vascular Surgery (1954)
    * International Society of Surgery Distinguished Service Award (1958)
    * Leriche Award (1959)
    * American Medical Association Distinguished Service Award (1959)
    * Albert Lasker Award for Clinical Medical Research (1963)
    * American Medical Association Billings Gold Medal Exhibit Award (1967)
    * American Heart Association Gold Heart Award (1968)
    * Union of Soviet Socialist Republics Academy of Sciences 50th Anniversary Jubilee Medal (1973)
    * Russian Academy of Medical Sciences Foreign Member (1974)
    * Veterans of Foreign Wars Commander-in-Chiefâ(TM)s Medal and Citation (1980)
    * American Surgical Association Distinguished Service Award (1981)
    * Academy of Surgical Research Markowitz Award (1988)
    * Association of American Medical Colleges Special Recognition Award (1988)
    * American Legion Distinguished Service Award (1990)
    * Premio Giuseppe Corradi Award for Surgery and Scientific Research (1997)
    * Russian Military Medical Academy, Boris Petrovsky International Surgeons Award and First Laureate of the Boris Petrovsky Gold Medal (1997)
    * John P. McGovern Compleat Physician Award (1999)
    * Russian Academy of Sciences Foreign Member (1999)
    * Texas Senate and House of Representatives, Adoption of resolutions honoring Dr. DeBakey for 50 years of medical practice in Texas (1999)
    * American Medical Association Virtual Mentor Award (2000)
    * American Philosophical Society Jonathan Rhoads Medal (2000)
    * Library of Congress Bicentennial Living Legend Award (2000)
    * Villanova University Mendel Medal Award (2001)
    * Houston Hall of Fame (2001)
    * NASA Invention of the Year Award (2001)
    * MUSC[1] "Lindbergh-Carrel Prize"[2](2002)
    * Congressional Gold Medal (April 23, 2008)

    Note that he not only won awards from the States, but the U.S.S.R. honored him with awards as well. Our mortal enemy for nearly 50 years recognized how great this guy is.

    Has Bush said anything about this, or is he continuing to be an inept idiot ignorant of events in the scientific community?

    • Where's the Nobel Prize you insensitive clods?

    • * Encyclopaedia Britannica

      Hmm.... I never realized it was quite so prestigious to own a copy of Britannica...

      In fact, this list seems to indicate that it's even more important than the Presidential Medal of Freedom, which DeBakey received in 1969, but isn't on the list.

  • by madmac63 ( 1148839 ) on Sunday July 13, 2008 @11:23PM (#24177301)
    In 1970, I had open heart surgery to repair an aortic ventricular aneurysm. I was 7 years old. I was on a heart-lung machine for the surgery, and my surgeon, Jay Ankeney, was undoubtable a denizen or Dr. DeBakey. At the time, open heart surgery was rare and extremely risky, and nearly unheard of on a child. A few years ago, I had the chance to meet one of the leading cardiac surgeons in Chicago, and told him about my experience. When he found out a surgeon had done open heart on a 7 year old in 1970 he exclaimed "that guy must have had steel balls to try and pull that off." DeBakey had a pair of big brass ones - EVERY time he cut into a patient, that patient was in jeopardy of dying soon, and dying from the procedure - a rock and a hard place. And he did it over and over. While 50,000 people owe him a direct debt, we all owe him an enormous one. I for one will recall his blessings.
    • by chrpai ( 806494 )

      I keep reading that `50,000 people` are in his debt but that would assume a 0% mortality rate. I wonder what the real numbers are.

      • Seeing as that is just the number of operations, it might be much less (failed operations, "repeat" patients). But, if you consider the techniques and technology he pioneered, it is much much *more* than 50,000.

      • I keep reading that `50,000 people` are in his debt but that would assume a 0% mortality rate. I wonder what the real numbers are.

        Even then, there are philisophical aspects. Of those 50,000 probably 99.9% faced certain death if he didn't operate. I mean, open heart surgery isn't like a tonsillectomy. I'd say that even the unsuccessful patients' families owe at least a little gratitude to the premier heart surgeon in the history of the world who personally took the case and gave it his best, even if it didn't work out.

        Personal DeBakey story:

        I was studying to be an OR tech in '93 at Naval Hospital San Diego, and was in surgical rotat

  • Will be sincerely missed.

    Dr. DeBakey was an example to be followed, a man who knew no bounds in his interdisciplinary research and persuit for the betterment of human life.

    In this sad day, all our hearts are made a little bit out of titanium alloy - to be like the ones you made to give life to those who needed to extend it so badly.

    R.I.P. Dr. DeBakey

    and thank you.

  • Bypass? (Score:1, Informative)

    by Anonymous Coward

    The bypass was developed by Favaloro, one of the gretests surgeons in Argentina.

    Wikipedia [wikipedia.org] says: Dr. René GerÃnimo Favaloro (July 12, 1923 â" July 29, 2000) was an Argentine cardiac surgeon who created the technique for coronary bypass surgery.

  • Progress is often diffuse and if it has happened before you are born you tend to take it for granted. It's nice to get to know about someone who was more productive in half an hour than most are in all their life. This men is truly an inspiration in his tireless effort to perform his craft, advance the sciences and make people get better.

    Thank you and may you rest in peace.
  • It is always a sad day when a giant in his field passes away, and today was one of those days. Indeed, Dr. DeBakey was one of the giants of modern medicine, due to the amount of innovation spearheaded by his efforts. His work directly affected countless lives for the better, as he caused a paradigm shift in cardiovascular medicine. A sad day indeed. May you rest in peace, Doc.
  • early riser (Score:3, Funny)

    by sonchat ( 819093 ) on Monday July 14, 2008 @01:55AM (#24178057)

    His father, a pharmacist, taught him to rise early and avoid wasting time

    He's no geek!

  • My Mom worked for him briefly, and My Dad met him during his residency. And the moral of the story is, if you not only personally save countless lives but create techniques that allow countless others to save countless lives (thus revolutionizing not merely medical science but Mathematics, with this concept of "finite uncountability"), then you're allowed to be an asshole.

    The rest of you are not quite so cool -- so be nice to each other.

  • I'm not trying to take anything away from this prolific surgeon whom I've always admired, but to the best of my knowledge he was not the first who performed aortocoronary bypass surgery. This praise should go to Rene Favoloro ( http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ren%C3%A9_Favaloro [wikipedia.org]).
  • ...numerous surgical instruments bear his name.

    All my scalpels are called Michael.

  • "In 2005 he underwent the Debakey procedure, which he pioneered, to treat the aortic dissection he suffered." The old saying of, "Doctor, heal thyself!" definitely does not apply to Dr. DeBlakey. /salute and godspeed.
  • Emigrant Parents (Score:3, Interesting)

    by sasha328 ( 203458 ) on Monday July 14, 2008 @09:27AM (#24180217) Homepage

    I grew up in the town where his parents (the Dabaghi's which was later anglicised to DeBakey) came from in South Lebanon.

    When I was still in that town, over 30 years ago he was a very famous man in that (his family is a big part of town as well) and in the sixties when he visited his relatives there was accorded great honours.

    Anyway, I reckon his fame and his ability to achieve great things were great conributing factors that lead many people in that town to also emigrate to US and also achieve many great things as US citizens.

    It shows that migrants are able to contribute considerably t their adoptive society than most people fear.

  • He had reached max level, what else could he do?
  • I think Blalock [wikipedia.org] and Thomas [wikipedia.org] were the first to directly operate on the heart. They were treating blue babys in the 40's. Thomas' role is especially remarkable in that because he was black, he had no college or formal medical training.

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