Harvey Feigenbaum

From Wikitia
Jump to navigation Jump to search
Harvey Feigenbaum
Add a Photo
Born (1933-11-20) November 20, 1933 (age 90)
East Chicago, Indiana
NationalityAmerican
CitizenshipUnited States of America
Education
  • Anatomy
  • Physiology
Alma materIndiana University
OccupationCardiologist
Known for
  • Work in the field of echocardiography
  • Father of Echocardiography

Harvey Feigenbaum (born 1933) is an American cardiologist known for his life-long work in the field of echocardiography. He has been called the 'Father of Echocardiography'.[1] He wrote the first textbook on the subject in 1972, which is currently in its 8th edition, and has published over 300 articles.[2] He has trained generations of cardiologists including many of the world's pioneers in the field through his numerous visitors, frequent workshops, annual courses in Indianapolis, Indiana beginning in 1968, the year when he started formal fellowship training.In addition he has given presentations at many of the world's cardiology meetings and has had countless lectures in virtually every major country in the world. He founded the field of cardiac sonography in 1965 and the American Society of Echocardiography in 1975. His seminal article on the diagnosis of pericardial effusions published in 1965 with his technique[3] "brought echocardiography to the attention of thousands of practitioners".[4]

Personal history

Feigenbaum was born on November 20, 1933 in East Chicago, Indiana. He is the youngest of the four children of Tillie and Julius Feigenbaum. His parents were Jewish immigrants from Europe. He graduated from East Chicago Washington High School where he was valedictorian, violin player, top player on the tennis team and concertmaster of the symphony orchestra. He worked as a shoe salesman during his college years, a skill he would later use to sell his idea of using echocardiography to study the form and function of the heart.

Indiana University

Feigenbaum attended Indiana University in Bloomington and graduated with a degree in anatomy and physiology in 1954. He finished his doctorate in medicine at the same institution four years later. He went on to spend his medical internship at Philadelphia General Hospital from 1958 to 1959. He then returned to the Indiana University Medical Center in Indianapolis for his residency and fellowship in cardiology under the direction of Dr. Charles Fisch. During his fellowship, Feigenbaum completed training in cardiac catheterization at the National Institute of Health in Bethesda, Maryland and then started the catheterization program at the Indiana University Medical Center.

Feigenbaum became interested in studying cardiac hemodynamics. It was difficult to use catheterization to measure volumes which were essential for this endeavor. Along with his former cardiac fellow, Richard Popp, MD, the two were the first to show a clear correlation between left ventricular echo dimensions and angiographic volumes[5]Many consider measuring the size of the left ventricular chamber and estimating its function to be the groundbreaking work that brought echocardiography to the mainstream of echocardiology. Even though pericardial effusions are serious, they are not very common. Information on left ventricular size and function is vital for every patient with known or suspected heart disease.


Feigenbaum with his trainees and colleagues over the past six decades went on to create multiple advances in echocardiography. They described how echocardiography could detect many abnormalities of the cardiac valves and chambers,[6] developed early strip chart recorders for M-mode echocardiograms,[7] introduced early 2-dimensional echocardiographic transducers and demonstrated digital techniques for recording and displaying echocardiograms,[8] and performed echocardiograms with exercise and pharmacologic stress[9] which were all developed at Indiana University.

Awards

  • 1976 Texas Heart Institute Medal and Ray C. Fish Award for Outstanding Achievement in Cardiovascular Disease
  • 1977 Modern Medicine Award fro Distinguished Achievement
  • 1977 Lewis A. Conner Lecture, American Heart Association
  • 1979 Richard and Hinda Rosenthal Award, American Heart Association, Outstanding Achievement in Cardiovascular Research
  • 1980 Distinguished Alumnus, IU School of Medicine
  • 1986 Distinguished Alumnus, IU College of Arts and Sciences
  • 1988 Gifted Teacher Award, American College of Cardiolgoy
  • 1989 Robert J. and Claire Pasarow Foundation, Award for Excellence in Carddiovascular Medicine, Los Angeles, CA
  • 1992 Eugene Drake Memorial Award, American Heart Association
  • 1997 Luminary Award for Scholarly Accomplishment in Science, Pisa, Italy
  • 1998 Louis F. Bishop Lecture, American College of Cardiology
  • 1998 World of Difference Lifetime Achievement Award from the Indiana Health Industry Forum
  • 2000 Feigenbaum Lecture inaugeration at the American Society of Echocardiography
  • 2002 Cor vitae Award from the Midwest Affiliate of the American Heart Association
  • 2004 Primio Mantevergine Award as the "Father of Modern Echocardiography" Naples, Italy
  • 2005 Living Legend Award from the Indiana Historical Society
  • 2005 American Heart Association Distinguished Scientist
  • 2006 International Honory Member, Japanese College of Cardiology
  • 2006 Honorary Member of the Mexican Society of Cardiology
  • 2016 Honorary Member of the European Society of Cardiovascular Imaging
  • 2020 IU Bicentenial Medal by Indiana University [10]

References

  1. [Harvy Feignebaum, M.D. by Barry J Maron, M.D. amjcard.2017.08.033]
  2. Echocardiography January 1, 1972 Lea and Febinger ISBN-13978-0812104044
  3. Ultrasound Diagnosis of Pericardial Effusion, Harvey Feigenbaum JAMA 1965:191(9):711-714
  4. Fye, W.Bruce "Caring for the Heart" 2015 p428 Oxford ISB 978-0-19-9998235-6
  5. Feigenbaum H, Popp RL, Wolf SB, Troy BL,Pombo JF, Haine CL, Dodge HT: Ultrasound Measurements of the Left Ventricle. A Correlative Study with Angiography. ArchInternMed. 1972:129(3)461-461
  6. Feigenbaum H: Ultrasound as a Clinical Tool in Valvular Heart Disease. CardiovascClin. Vol.5, No.2, FA Davis and Company, Philadelphia, PA 1973 pp 219-246
  7. Eggleton RC, Feigenbaum H, Johnston KW, Weyman AE, Dillon JC, Chang S; Visualization of Cardiac Dynamics with Real-time B-mode Ultrasonic Scanner. "Ultrasound in Medicine" Vol.1, D White editor, Plenum Press, 1975 pp385-393
  8. Feigenbaum H:Digital Recording, Display and Storage of Echocardiograms. J Am Soc Echocardiogr 1:378-83 1988
  9. Wann LS, Faris JV, Chldress RH, Dillo JC, Weyman AE, Feigenbaum H: Exercise Cross-sectional Echocardiography in Ischemic Heart Disease. Circulation, 60:1300-8 1979

External links

Add External links

This article "Harvey Feigenbaum" is from Wikipedia. The list of its authors can be seen in its historical. Articles taken from Draft Namespace on Wikipedia could be accessed on Wikipedia's Draft Namespace.