Charles Dubost | |
Birth Date: | 1914 |
Death Date: | 1991 |
Nationality: | French |
Occupation: | Surgeon |
Known For: | First 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]
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]
Dubost joined Hôpital Broussais after the Second World War and was appointed to cardiac surgery in the blue baby unit in 1947, the same year that Alfred Blalock demonstrated 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]
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]
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]