Francis d moore biography

Biographical Memoirs: Volume 88 (2006)

1972 Transplant. The Give and Take of Tissue Transplantation. New York: Simon and Schuster.

The normal state and brief history of intravenous nutrition. In Intravenous Hyperalimentation. (Conference on Intravenous Hyperalimentation, U.S. Army Institute of Surgical Research, San Antonio, Texas, 1970.) Eds., G. S. M. Cowan and W. L. Scheetz, pp. 17-19. Philadelphia: Lea and Febiger.

1973 Systemic indicators of the low flow state: Biochemistry and metabolism during tissue hypoperfusion. In The Microcirculation in ClinicalMedicine, ed. R. Wells, pp. 195-212. New York: Academic Press.

1975 Report on the Manpower Subcommittee, Study of Surgical Services for the United States. Ann Surg. 182(4):526-530.

1977 With R. J. Nickerson, T. Colton, S. Harvey, R. H. Egdahl, W. B. Babson Jr., W. V. McDermott, and W. G. Austen. National surgical work patterns as a basis for residency training plans. The response of a panel of surgeons. Arch. Surg. 112(2):125-147.

Homeostasis: Bodily changes in trauma and surgery. The response to injury i

. 2002 Apr;235(4):600–601.

Francis Daniels Moore died Saturday, November 24, 2001 at his home in Boston. The generic piece is easy – Dr. Moore was born August 17, 1913 in Evanston, Illinois. His early childhood was spent in Illinois and in the ranch country of Wyoming. It reads as an idyllic childhood and prepared him for the quite extraordinary career that was to follow. He graduated with an AB from Harvard College in 1935 and an MD from the Harvard Medical School in 1939. His surgical residency was at the Massachusetts General Hospital, but it is the Peter Bent Brigham Hospital that will forever be associated with his name. His leadership from 1948 to 1976 as the Surgeon-in-Chief at the Peter Bent Brigham Hospital was at a time in American surgery when he established himself as one of the great clinician-surgeons and surgical scientists of the 20th century.

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Not everything was easy as a 35 year-old chairman. Other giants, such as Robert Zollinger and Bert Dunphy, recently back from World War II as decorated veterans, were both a stimulus an

Francis Daniels Moore

American surgeon

Francis Daniels Moore (April 17, 1913, in Evanston, Illinois – November 24, 2001, in Westwood, Massachusetts) was an American surgeon who was a pioneer in numerous experimental surgical treatments. Among his many achievements, he refined burn-treatment techniques, helped perform the world's first successful organ transplant (which involved a kidney), and accurately determined the volume of water and other nutrients in the human body using radioactive isotopes of those substances.

In 1952, Moore became a member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences.[2] He was awarded the 1978 Lister Medal for his contributions to surgical science.[3] The corresponding Lister Oration, given at the Royal College of Surgeons of England, was delivered on May 23, 1979, and was titled "Science and service".[4] He later became a member of both the National Academy of Sciences[5] and the American Philosophical Society.[6]

Moore graduated from Harvard in 1935, where he was president of The Harvard Lampo

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