Title of article
The holmes heart: Historic associations and pathologic anatomy
Author/Authors
Anthony R. C. Dobell، نويسنده , , Richard Van Praagh، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 1996
Pages
9
From page
437
To page
445
Abstract
In 1824, Andrew F. Holmes, later to become the first Dean of the Medical Faculty of McGill University, published the autopsy findings of a 21-year-old man who had died with chronic cyanosis and congestive heart failure. Autopsy revealed the first documented case of single ventricle. Reinspection and detailed photographs published for the first time show absence of the sinus (body or inflow tract) of the morphologically right ventricle (RV) and hence a single (unpaired) morphologically left ventricle (LV), double-inlet LV, infundibular outlet chamber (IOC), and normally related great arteries, with the pulmonary artery arising from the IOC and the aorta from the single LV. In view of its rarity, William Osler urged Maude Abbott to republish this case, which she did in 1901. Republication of the Holmes heart catalyzed the career of Maude Abbott, who then proceeded to become the worldʹs authority on congenital heart disease until her death in 1940.
Journal title
American Heart Journal
Serial Year
1996
Journal title
American Heart Journal
Record number
527075
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