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John Gibbon
Born Sep 29 1903 - Died Feb 5 1973
Oxygenating Unit for Extracorporeal Circulation Devices
Heart-Lung Machine
Patent Number(s) 2,702,035
Inducted 2004
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.
Invention Impact
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 Mary
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.
Inventor Bio
John Heysham Gibbon was born in Philadelphia and was a fourth generation
physician. a received his A.B. from Princeton University in 1923, and
his M.D. from Jefferson Medical College of Philadelphia in 1927.
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