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Biography Historical Article
A meaningful legacy: urologists as Nobel Prize laureates.
- Vladimir Mouraviev and Martin E Gleave.
- The Prostate Centre at Vancouver General Hospital, Vancouver, BC, Canada.
- Can J Urol. 2003 Feb 1; 10 (1): 1737-42.
ObjectiveTo review the careers of two urologists among Nobel Prize-winners in medicine, W. Forssmann and C. H. Huggins, and the significance of their contributions.Material And MethodsInvestigation was performed based on analysis of collected findings from the biographies of laureates, their scientific publications and the Nobel archive database.ResultsReview revealed that of the 175 scientists and physicians who received the Nobel Prize, just over one half (94) held an MD degree while the remainder were PhD's or other degrees. Of the 94 MD-degreed physicians nine (9.4%) were surgeons. Two of these laureates were urologists- Drs. Werner Forssmann and Charles B. Huggins, who were awarded the Nobel Prize in 1956 and 1966, respectively. Although Werner Forssmann worked as a urologist for most of his career, early in his surgical training he invented procedures for cardiac catheterization and performed the first procedures on himself in 1929. Charles Huggins identified the role of androgens in prostate cancer progression in 1940, and thus established the principles of hormonal suppressive therapy for advanced disease.ConclusionsThe distinguished accomplishments of these two great urologists exemplify the highest level of excellence in science for the entire surgical and urological community. Furthermore, today's breakthroughs in molecular medicine represent an extremely appealing challenge for the new generation of scientists and clinicians.
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