As if surgically repairing failing hearts was not enough, Dr. DeBakey became a pioneer of artificial heart research and of cardiac assist devices. On July 18, 1963, after years of animal research, he performed the first successful human implantation of a left ventricular assist device (LVAD), one which he devised; the patient died after 4 days from causes unrelated to the technology. In 1966, Dr. DeBakey’s redesigned, extracorporeal pneumatic pump was used in a 37-year-old woman who could not be weaned from the heart-lung machine after dual valve replacement. After 10 days of LVAD support, she recovered sufficiently for the pump to be removed and she survived. This pump served as the basis of Dr. DeBakey’s first total artificial heart model, created in 1968.
Dr. DeBakey was honored profusely throughout his lifetime by the medical community and the general public. Numerous medical facilities are named after him in this country and around the world. He received countless awards for his technical and social achievements in medicine. Among these honors were the American Medical Association’s Distinguished Service Award (1959), the Albert Lasker Award for Clinical Medical Research (1963), the Presidential Medal of Freedom (1969), and the National Medal of Science (1987). More recently, he was the first foreign member elected to the Russian Academy of Sciences (1999), was given the Library of Congress Bicentennial Living Legend Award (2000), and was awarded the Congressional Gold Medal in April 2008.
In his death, Dr. DeBakey was the first Houston resident given the honor of lying in state at City Hall and, at the request of his family, he lay dressed in his characteristic glasses, scrubs, and white coat for viewing by long lines of the general public.n
Sources and suggested readingsHeart Fail. Clin. 2007;3:117-20.J. Vasc. Surg. 1996;23:1031-4.