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Dr.
John Gibbon developed a heart-lung machine that he used in 1953
to successfully complete the first open-heart operation. Because
of the development of the heart-lung machine, surgeons were able
to perform surgeries previously considered too risky. Improved
versions of the heart-lung machine allow surgeons today to repair
heart defects and damaged heart valves, and to perform bypass
surgery and heart transplants.
In
1930, after witnessing the death of a patient from a pulmonary
embolectomy, Gibbon conceived the idea of a machine that could
support cardiac and respiratory functions during surgical procedures
to repair defects in the heart and lungs. Over the next decade,
Gibbon and his wife developed experimental devices that allowed
them to successfully maintain complete pulmonary cardiac bypass
in cats for 25 minutes. In the late 1940s, Gibbon persuaded IBM
President Thomas J. Watson to provide him with the technical expertise
needed to produce a more sophisticated device.
John
Heysham Gibbon was born in Philadelphia and was a fourth generation
physician. He received his A.B. from Princeton University in 1923,
and his M.D. from Jefferson Medical College of Philadelphia in
1927.

Frederick
Banting
Charles Best
Vannevar Bush
James Collip
Harry Wesley
Coover
Wallace
Coulter
Ray Dolby
Edith Flanigen
Robert Gallo
Ivan Getting
John Gibbon
Lloyd Augustus
Hall
Elias Howe
Charles D.
Kelman
Luc Montagnier
Bernard Oliver
Bradford
Parkinson
Norbert
Rillieux
John Roebling
Claude Shannon
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