Christiaan Neethling Barnard was a South African cardiac surgeon. He performed the world’s first human-to-human heart transplant operation in 1967. His technique saved the lives of ten babies in Cape Town and was adopted by surgeons in Britain and the U.S. He died in 2001 at the age of 78 after an asthma attack.
About Christiaan Barnard in brief

He is survived by his three children, two sons and a daughter. He was a member of the Dutch Reformed Church and served as a missionary to mixed-race people. His father, Adam Barnard, was a minister in the DutchReformed Church. He also had a twin brother, Johannes, who was twelve years older than Chris Barnard. One of his four brothers, Abraham, died of a heart problem at the aged of three. He had also experienced the loss of a daughter who was stillborn and who had been the fraternal twin of Barnard’s older brother Johannes. In 1955, he travelled to the US and was introduced to the heart-lung machine, and Barnard transferred to the service run by open heart surgery pioneer Walt Lillehei. In 1958, he was appointed head of the Department of Experimental Surgery at the Groote Schuur Hospital, Cape Town. In the same year he obtained a doctorate in medicine from the same university for a dissertation titled ‘The treatment of tuberculous meningitis’. After nine months and forty-three attempts, a puppy was able to reproduce some of the condition in the womb, after which it was born some two weeks later. This method was also adapted in a clinical setting and used in a set of clinical trials.
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