#55 Blood Heat Exchanger
1957
First commercial human-blood heat exchanger for controlling hyperthermic temperatures during open-heart surgery
This is the first commercial, human-blood heat exchanger. Developed in 1957, it permitted a patient's body temperature to be safely and rapidly lowered during open heart surgery to any desired and precisely controlled hypothermic level, then during the conclusion of the operation rapidly rewarmed to normal. Prior to this, hypothermic surgery required hours of preoperative, hard-to-control, external emersion cooling and postoperative rewarming.
Its design was a cooperative development between researchers at the Duke University Medical Center led by Dr. Ivan W. Brown, Jr., and research engineers of the Harrison Radiator Division of the General Motors Corporation led by W.D. Emmons.
Landmark Location
Amherst, NY
Visiting Info
[please confirm] regular hours: school year, Sun-Thrs 8:30am-11:30pm, Fri to 5pm, Sat noon-9pm