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Abstract
After training in physics during World War II, I spent 2 years designing radar at Massachusetts Institute of Technology and then switched to biophysics. After medical school and a residency, I was doctor drafted to National Institutes of Health where I studied blood gas transport in hypothermia and developed the carbon dioxide electrode and the blood gas analyzer (pH, partial pressure of O2, and partial pressure of CO2). I joined the University of California San Francisco in 1958 in a new anesthesia department and new Cardiovascular Research Institute. My research aims were anesthesia patient monitoring, respiratory physiology, blood gas transport, and high-altitude acclimatization and pathology.Entities:
Keywords: Acclimatization; Altitude; Anesthesia; Blood gas analysis; CO2 electrode; Cerebral blood flow; Monitor; Oximetry; Oxygen dissociation curve; Regulation of respiration
Year: 2013 PMID: 24192065 PMCID: PMC3850914 DOI: 10.1186/2046-7648-2-29
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Extrem Physiol Med ISSN: 2046-7648
Figure 1The first blood gas analyzer. Published as reference [4] in 1958. Copyright was by photo department at NIH and given to me in 1958. The Journal of Applied Physiology does not have copyright.
Figure 2Portrait, 2011 given to me by Sara Cheng from the University of Colorado. No copyright.