Vladimir Demikhov

@Organ Transplant Pioneer, Timeline and Life

Vladimir Petrovich Demikhov was a Soviet scientist considered as a pioneer of organ transplantation

Jul 18, 1916

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Biography

Personal Details

  • Birthday: July 18, 1916
  • Died on: November 22, 1998
  • Nationality: Russian
  • Famous: Organ Transplant Pioneer, Surgeons, Scientists
  • City/State: Moscow
  • Known as: Vladimir Petrovich Demikhov
  • Birth Place: Moscow

Vladimir Demikhov born at

Moscow

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Birth Place

In August 1946, he married a lady called Lia with whom he had a daughter Olga born on July 16, 1947.

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Personal Life

This legendary scientist suffered from recurrent stroke in April 1998, lost his wife on July 11 that year and breathed his last on November 22, same year leaving his only daughter behind.

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Personal Life

Demikhov was born on July 18, 1916, in Yarizenskaia village, Moscow, Russia, in a peasant family. He lost his father during the Russian civil war. He and his two siblings were raised by his mother. His mother was not much educated, but she strived hard to give good education to all her children.

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Childhood, Education & Initial Experiments

Demikhov headed for Moscow in 1934, and enrolled at the University of Moscow to study biology.

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Childhood, Education & Initial Experiments

While attending the University of Moscow, Demikhov, who mainly experimented on dogs among other animals, designed the first mechanical cardiac-assist device in 1937. The devise that had the ability to take over cardiac function for around five hours was, however, too big to install in a dog’s chest. The first ever experiments on animals involving the removal of heart while maintaining circulation was carried out by him.

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Childhood, Education & Initial Experiments

In 1940, he completed his graduation from the University of Moscow and began serving as an assistant in the Department of Physiology of the university.

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Childhood, Education & Initial Experiments

During those times, artificial heart implantation was considered unattainable. Demikhov nevertheless went on to transplant a heart in a dog’s inguinal area. He, however, realised that the active function of the heart can only be achieved when transplantation is made into the thorax, and that the heart cannot play an effective role in blood movement if its transplantation is made into the inguinal area or to the vessels of the neck.

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Childhood, Education & Initial Experiments

Research work of Demikhov took a back seat during the Second World War, when he was accorded the rank of lieutenant following his basic military training. He was posted in a field evacuation hospital as a pathologist. Circumstances and effects of the war posed a big challenge for the otherwise honest Demikhov.

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Role During the Second World War

While recalling his experiences of the war to his beloved daughter, Demikhov mentioned that the stress of the war zone was so intense that at times soldiers would shoot themselves so as to take refuge at the hospital. As such act was taken as a war crime and invited death punishment, he used to be consulted as a forensic expert.

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Role During the Second World War

Although Demikhov was fully aware of the consequence that he may face for his lies, he tried his level best to save lives of as many soldiers as possible by weakening the evidences that otherwise would have proved their injuries as self-inflicted.

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Role During the Second World War

Demikhov was in Berlin during the capitulation of Germany. He travelled along with his unit from Berlin to China in 1945, and returned to Moscow at the end of the year.

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Post War Works & Experiments

The first successful procedure of intrathoracic transplantations of a heart and a lung, and also the heart and lungs together in a mammal was conducted by him while experimenting with dogs in 1946. Success of his procedure was palpable for the first time on June 30 that year when a dog survived heterotopic heart–lung transplantation for 9.5 hours.

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Post War Works & Experiments

He was with the ‘Institute of Surgery,’ Moscow, from 1947 to 1955, where he continued with his experiments. His work was considered unethical by a review committee of the Soviet Ministry of Health in the 1950s, and he was directed to stop his researches, but the director of the Institute of Surgery, Alexander V. Vishnevsky, surgeon-in-charge of the Soviet armed forces, applied his own power to allow Demikhov to continue with research works.

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Post War Works & Experiments

The design of heart–lung preparation of Demikhov was based on the first heart-lung preparation introduced by I. P. Pavlov and N. Ia. Chistovich in 1886. A more improved and complex heart–lung preparation was elucidated by Knowlton and Starling in 1912. This preparation was simplified and applied by Demikhov in the early 1950s. He said that when human heart and lungs transplantation will be possible in future, application of this preparation will facilitate transfer of the organ in a functioning state.

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Post War Works & Experiments

On July 29, 1953, he conducted the first successful coronary bypass surgery on a dog. Although such experimental work of Demikhov was initially considered impractical and eccentric by many, V.I. Kolesov conducted further experiments in Leningrad and emerged as the first to conduct successful coronary bypasses. The pioneering works of Demikhov was acknowledged by Kolesov in many of the latter’s publications.

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Post War Works & Experiments