Aubrey Leatham and the introduction of cardiac pacing to the UK

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Abstract

In the early 1950s, Dr Aubrey Leatham established a cardiac unit at St. George's Hospital, Hyde Park Corner, London. He developed and taught the essential clinical skill of cardiac auscultation. Under his guidance a clinical department for the care of cardiac patients was developed and coupled to physiological academic research. He was a pioneer in cardiac pacing and, in 1961, Harold Siddons, O'Neal Humphries, and Aubrey Leatham implanted the first 'indwelling' pacemaker in the UK in a 65-year-old man with repeated Stokes-Adams attacks due to complete heart block. The nickel-cadmium 'accumulator', which powered the pacemaker, had to be recharged once a week. © 2010 The Author.

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Camm, A. J., Jones, S., Gammage, M. D., & Rowland, E. (2010). Aubrey Leatham and the introduction of cardiac pacing to the UK. Europace, 12(10), 1356–1359. https://doi.org/10.1093/europace/euq183

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