Charles Dubost (surgeon)

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Charles Dubost
Born1914
Died1991
NationalityFrench
OccupationSurgeon
Known forFirst abdominal aortic aneurysm resection with a homograft replacement

Charles Dubost (October 1914 – 1991) was a French surgeon who performed the first abdominal aortic aneurysm resection with a homograft replacement. Michael DeBakey later performed a similar operation with a prosthesis and named it “Dubost's operation.” He was also the first to perform a carotid endarterectomy under cardiac bypass.[1][2][3][4]

Early life and education

Charles Dubost was born in October 1914 and educated in Paris. He had completed his medical studies before the onset of the

Second World War.[1]

Surgical career

Dubost joined Hôpital Broussais after the Second World War and was appointed to cardiac surgery in the

Taussig-Blalock operation, a procedure Dubost then led in Europe.[1]

In January 1951, Dubost led one of the three surgical teams that performed early kidney transplants in Paris, the others being René Küss and Marceau Servelle.[5][6] In the same year, he resected an abdominal aortic aneurysm and replaced it with a cadaveric graft that had been preserved by freezing and stored in N. Oeconomous's laboratory.

In 1954, Dubost designed and used a mechanical dilator with two parallel blades which could be passed into the atrium and into the mitral orifice under digital control.[3]

He performed the first carotid endarterectomy under cardiac bypass[1] and later performed one of the early transplants in 1968.[7]

Awards and honours

In 1940, he won the Croix de Guerre as a young medical lieutenant.[1]

He became an officer of the

légion d'honneur and was elected to both Académie Nationale de Médecine and the French Academy of Sciences.[1]

Later life and death

Dubost retired in 1982, following which he spent the rest of life reading and listening to classical music. He died at Saint-Michel Hospital in 1991.[2]

Selected publications

  • Dubost, C; Allary, M; Oeconomos, N (1952). "Resection of an aneurysm of the abdominal aorta: reestablishment of the continuity by a preserved human arterial graft, with result after five months". AMA Arch Surg. 64 (3): 405–8.
    PMID 14894065
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    .

References