The puzzle people : memoirs of a transplant surgeon

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The puzzle people : memoirs of a transplant surgeon

Thomas E. Starzl

University of Pittsburgh Press, c1992

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Includes index

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Description

Thomas Starzl grew up in Lemars, Iowa, the son of a newspaper publisher and a nurse. His father also wrote science fiction and was acquainted with the writer Ray Bradbury. Starzl left the family business to enter Northwestern University Medical School where he earned both an MD and a PhD. When he was a student, and later during his surgical internship at the Johns Hopkins Hospital, he began the series of animal experiments that led eventually to the world's first transplantation of the human liver in 1963. Until the age of 33, Starzl says, ""I felt like a missile looking for a trajectory."" His work with liver transplantation gave him a course for life and, despite initial setbacks and failures, he has pursued it relentlessly, eventually achieving the success for which he known. Throughout his careeer, first at the University of Colorado, and then at the University of Pittsburgh, he has aroused both admiration and controversy. His technical innovations and medical genius have revolutionised the field, but Starzl has not hesitated to address the moral and ethical issues raised by transplantation. In this book he clearly states his position on many hotly debated issues including brain death, randomised trials for experimental drugs, the costs of transplant operations, and the system for selecting organ recipients from among scores of desperately ill patients. There are many heroes in the story of transplantation, and many ""puzzle people"", the patients who, as one journalist suggested, might one day be made entirely of various transplanted parts. They are old and young, obscure and world famous. Some have been taken into the hearts of America, like Stormie Jones, the brave and beautiful child from Texas. Every patient who receives some-else's organ - and Starzl remembers each one - is a puzzle. ""It was not just the acquisition of a new part"", he writes, ""The rest of the body had to change in many ways before the gift could be accepted. It was neccessary for the mind to see the world in a different way."" The surgeons and physicians who pioneered transplantation were also changed: they too become puzzle people. ""Some were corroded or destroyed by the experience, some were sublimated, and none remained the same."" Starzl describes complex surgical procedures in clear, everyday language; he writes modesty of his own accomplishments; and he writes powerfully about the individuals whose lives he has struggled to save.

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