Norman Shumway
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This article concerns the American heart surgeon. See Norman D. Shumway for the American politician.
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Norman Shumway
Norman Shumway
Norman Shumway
Born February 09, 1923
Kalamazoo, Michigan
Died February 10, 2006
Palo Alto, California
Nationality United States
Fields Surgeon
Known for Organ transplant Ciclosporin

Norman Edward Shumway (February 9, 1923 – February 10, 2006) was a pioneer of heart surgery at Stanford University.

In collaboration with Randall B. Griepp1, he was famous for being the first doctor to successfully carry out a heart transplant operation in the United States in 1968, after Christiaan Barnard's 1967 operation in South Africa. The early years of the procedure were checkered, with few patients surviving for long after it finished. Shumway was the only American surgeon to continue performing the operation after others abandoned it after poor results.

In the 1970s he and his team refined the operation tackling the twin problems of rejection and the necessity for potentially dangerous drugs to suppress the immune system. In particular he pioneered the use of cyclosporine, instead of traditional drugs, which made the operation much safer.

Shumway was born in Kalamazoo, Michigan. He attended the University of Michigan for one year as an undergraduate until he was drafted by the Army in 1943, which sent him to John Tarleton Agriculture Junior College in Stephenville, Texas for engineering training. He then underwent Army Specialized Training, which included nine months of pre-medical training at Baylor University, followed by enrollment at Vanderbilt University for medical school. He received his M.D. from Vanderbilt in 1949. He did his residency at the University of Minnesota, and was awarded a surgical doctorate in 1956. In 1958, he began working as an instructor in surgery at Stanford Hospital in San Francisco, California, and later, in Palo Alto when the hospital was moved.

Shumway rose to become chief of the division of cardiothoracic surgery at Stanford in 1965 and in 1974, he negotiated the creation of a separate Department of Cardiothoracic Surgery, which he chaired until his retirement in 1993. He spent many years training promising young residents of cardiothoracic surgery at Stanford University.

In his later years Shumway was the first recipient of the Lifetime Achievement[1] Award given by the International Society for Heart & Lung Transplantation and set up a foundation[2] to provide support and resources in education.

Shumway's marriage to the former Mary Lou Stuurmans ended in divorce. The couple had four children, one of whom directs heart and lung transplantation at the University of Minnesota.

He died of lung cancer in Palo Alto in 2006, on the day after his 83rd birthday.

See also

References

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