Narrative Highlight: Monica Beyer

 
In December of 2002 we conducted preliminary email interviews with leading figures in the field of bionics. The text below comes from the exchange with Monica Beyer, Downstate Medical Center.
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1. Which individual or event do you attribute the greatest historical significance in the advancement of organ replacement devices or machines? Please explain why.
  The two things that stand out in my mind as the most revolutionary in dialysis are not, in fact, machines. The first is the internal arteriovenous fistula developed by Cimino and Breschia. Until its advent, canulation with external shunts were needed to provide access for chronic hemodialysis. By the now, in retrospect, simple means of making an internal connection between and artery and vein, repeated, safe, and usually adequate blodd flows could be achieved without the constant fear of a patient losing his or her "lifeline" or accidentally bleedig to death. this was a breakthrough in terms of life prolongation as well as life quality.

The second that comes to mind is erythropoeitin. Until it became available, large chronic dialysis units were the largest users of blood in any major hospital center - including ours, because of the need for frequent packed cell transfusions to keep the ESRD patient's hct above 20. The patients didn't die of anemia, but they were grey skinned, cyanotic with physical exercise, constantly tired, and in most cases barely getting by. Those pts who, because of their underlying disease (ie polycystic kidney disease) had higher hcts were easy to pick out of any group of CRF patients. Epo dramatically changed this life style by creating pink cheeked, energetic, and more socially involved individuals whose lives no longer consisted of little more than trips back and forth to a dialysis unit thrice weekly. There were even wives of dialysis patients who thanked the staff because for the first time in many years their husbands were interested in sex again!

While the constant improvements in artificial organs continues on the engineering front, I believe those things that continue to improve the quality of life for people dependent upon the technology will be as important in the future as they have been in the past.