Donald Longmore

Professor Donald Longmore OBE, FRCSEd, FRCR (born 1928) is a British consultant surgeon and clinical physiologist. He was one of the team who performed the first heart transplant in the United Kingdom.

Professor

Donald Longmore

OBE, FRCSEd, FRCR
Longmore in June 1997
Born
Donald Bernard Longmore

1928 (1928)
NationalityUnited Kingdom
Occupation
  • Consultant surgeon
  • Clinical physiologist

Longmore was a Consultant Surgeon and Clinical Physiologist at the National Heart Hospital from 1963 to 1980.[1] On 3 May 1968, together with Donald Ross and Keith Ross, he performed the first heart transplant in the United Kingdom, which was also only the eleventh in the world.[1]

From 1982 to 1993 he worked as Professor of Magnetic Resonance in Medicine and Director of the Magnetic Resonance Unit, at the Royal Brompton National Heart and Lung Hospital, where he was latterly Emeritus.[1]

He also holds management positions in companies delivering magnetic resonance services.[1]

Longmore was made an Officer of the Order of the British Empire (OBE) in the 1999 New Year Honours, "for services to Magnetic Resonance Scanning".[2] Imperial College named their "CORDA Donald Longmore PhD Fellowship" to honour Longmore.[3] He is a Fellow of the Royal College of Surgeons of Edinburgh (FRCSEd) and a Fellow of the Royal College of Radiologists (FRCR).[1]

Works

  • Spare-part Surgery. M.Ross-Macdonald (ed.). London: Aldus Books Ltd. 1968. ISBN 978-0-490-00111-4.
gollark: "We invented"?
gollark: They COULD be lying.
gollark: I see.
gollark: "Provably" means "X is definitely Y and I can prove it".
gollark: Well, sure, but "most likely to" isn't the same as "definitely".

References

  1. Tilli Tansey; Lois Reynolds, eds. (1999), Early heart transplant surgery in the UK, Wellcome Witnesses to Contemporary Medicine, History of Modern Biomedicine Research Group, ISBN 978-1-84129-007-2, Wikidata Q29581627
  2. "No. 53545". The London Gazette (Supplement). 30 December 1998. pp. 1–38.
  3. "The CORDA Donald Longmore PhD Fellowship". Imperial College. 29 November 2011. Retrieved 6 June 2017.


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