Joseph E. Murray’s struggle to transplant kidneys: failure, individuality, and plastic surgery, 1950-1965
This paper offers a historical analysis of the American plastic surgeon and Nobel laureate Joseph E. Murray’s kidney transplantation. After succeeding in the first kidney transplantation between monozygotic twins in 1954, he transplanted kidneys between genetically distinct people after X-radiation...
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sg-ntu-dr.10356-1788272024-07-13T16:57:17Z Joseph E. Murray’s struggle to transplant kidneys: failure, individuality, and plastic surgery, 1950-1965 Park, Hyung Wook School of Humanities History Arts and Humanities Medicine, Health and Life Sciences Joseph E. Murray Failure Individuality Kidney transplantation Plastic surgery Immunological tolerance This paper offers a historical analysis of the American plastic surgeon and Nobel laureate Joseph E. Murray’s kidney transplantation. After succeeding in the first kidney transplantation between monozygotic twins in 1954, he transplanted kidneys between genetically distinct people after X-radiation and immunosuppressants. Amid these achievements, however, Murray encountered numerous failures, which he thought were closely intertwined with each patient’s physiological and pathological individuality. As he appropriated his expertise in plastic surgery for kidney transplantation, this individuality became a major issue that he had to cope with in his efforts to avoid failures. To him, kidney transplantation could fail because of each individual’s immunological barrier or constitutional singularity that could engender unexpected complications. Although he could neither explain nor control many of these failures, I argue that his unsuccessful work and patient individuality played multiple roles in shaping his operations as a plastic surgeon. They structured the path of his surgical research, made sense of it, defended him from criticism, and formed the way that he presented the results of his work with an immunological implication. Consequently, Murray, with little scientific training, articulated an important dimension of immunological tolerance relevant to clinical settings. Ministry of Education (MOE) Submitted/Accepted version This work was supported by the Academic Research Fund Tier-1 of the Ministry of Education in Singapore (RG 74/14). 2024-07-10T08:57:23Z 2024-07-10T08:57:23Z 2024 Journal Article Park, H. W. (2024). Joseph E. Murray’s struggle to transplant kidneys: failure, individuality, and plastic surgery, 1950-1965. Journal of the History of Medicine and Allied Sciences, 79(2), 143-162. https://dx.doi.org/10.1093/jhmas/jrad042 0022-5045 https://hdl.handle.net/10356/178827 10.1093/jhmas/jrad042 2 79 143 162 en RG 74/14 Journal of the History of Medicine and Allied Sciences © 2023 The Author(s). Published by Oxford University Press. All rights reserved. This article may be downloaded for personal use only. Any other use requires prior permission of the copyright holder. The Version of Record is available online at http://doi.org/10.1093/jhmas/jrad042. application/pdf |
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Arts and Humanities Medicine, Health and Life Sciences Joseph E. Murray Failure Individuality Kidney transplantation Plastic surgery Immunological tolerance |
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Arts and Humanities Medicine, Health and Life Sciences Joseph E. Murray Failure Individuality Kidney transplantation Plastic surgery Immunological tolerance Park, Hyung Wook Joseph E. Murray’s struggle to transplant kidneys: failure, individuality, and plastic surgery, 1950-1965 |
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This paper offers a historical analysis of the American plastic surgeon and Nobel laureate Joseph E. Murray’s kidney transplantation. After succeeding in the first kidney transplantation between monozygotic twins in 1954, he transplanted kidneys between genetically distinct people after X-radiation and immunosuppressants. Amid these achievements, however, Murray encountered numerous failures, which he thought were closely intertwined with each patient’s physiological and pathological individuality. As he appropriated his expertise in plastic surgery for kidney transplantation, this individuality became a major issue that he had to cope with in his efforts to avoid failures. To him, kidney transplantation could fail because of each individual’s immunological barrier or constitutional singularity that could engender unexpected complications. Although he could neither explain nor control many of these failures, I argue that his unsuccessful work and patient individuality played multiple roles in shaping his operations as a plastic surgeon. They structured the path of his surgical research, made sense of it, defended him from criticism, and formed the way that he presented the results of his work with an immunological implication. Consequently, Murray, with little scientific training, articulated an important dimension of immunological tolerance relevant to clinical settings. |
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School of Humanities |
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School of Humanities Park, Hyung Wook |
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Park, Hyung Wook |
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Park, Hyung Wook |
title |
Joseph E. Murray’s struggle to transplant kidneys: failure, individuality, and plastic surgery, 1950-1965 |
title_short |
Joseph E. Murray’s struggle to transplant kidneys: failure, individuality, and plastic surgery, 1950-1965 |
title_full |
Joseph E. Murray’s struggle to transplant kidneys: failure, individuality, and plastic surgery, 1950-1965 |
title_fullStr |
Joseph E. Murray’s struggle to transplant kidneys: failure, individuality, and plastic surgery, 1950-1965 |
title_full_unstemmed |
Joseph E. Murray’s struggle to transplant kidneys: failure, individuality, and plastic surgery, 1950-1965 |
title_sort |
joseph e. murray’s struggle to transplant kidneys: failure, individuality, and plastic surgery, 1950-1965 |
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2024 |
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https://hdl.handle.net/10356/178827 |
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1806059833132056576 |