Showing posts with label denton cooley. Show all posts
Showing posts with label denton cooley. Show all posts
Wednesday, December 28, 2011
100,000 Hearts A Surgeon’s Memoir: Review
The other day I was at the grocery store waiting in line and flipping through Texas Monthly and noticed an article about heart surgeon Dr. Denton Cooley. The article mentioned his memoir was about to be published. When I got home I did some research online and found that it was available at the River Oaks book store (I actually received it before it goes on sale on Amazon). The book was a Christmas gift to myself. Cooley’s memoir is once of the best memories/autobiographies I have ever read. Even the book was written by a heart surgeon the book did not have very many technical. I was surprised by how well Cooley writes.
After reading the book anyone could say that Denton Cooley is in a true way an all-American. Cooley went to the University of Texas on a basketball scholarship. Not only did he play basketball, was in a fraternity, graduated with highest honors, and served in the Army after medical school. In medical school, he excelled as reaching the top of his class at John Hopkins. What is seemingly clear thought the book is Cooley’s work ethic. During his peak years he would wake up 5 a.m. every day and work 15 hours. Since 1947, Cooley has published over 1,400 articles which is prolific if you consider that not every article submitted to medical journals get published. Cooley also taught at the University of Texas-Houston medical school and the Baylor College of Medicine. Clearly, Cooley has led a busy life. On top of writing and teaching the thing he is most well known for is the amount of surgeries he has done. The Texas Heart Institute which Cooley is affiliated with has performed over 100,000 surgeries. Cooley stopped performing surgeries at 78 (he is currently 91). Throughout the book he is constantly innovating new techniques or using different devices to try to save the patient’s life. Cooley took on difficult cases that other doctors would have never touched. In the period between 1962 and 1967 the mortality rate for people that received heart transplants fell from 70% to 8%. Cooley and Domingo Liotta worked on the first artificial heart which allowed the first patient to live 65 hours. Today artificial hearts can last between 1-2 years. Cooley no doubt helped advanced medicine and promote Houston as one of the best medical centers in the world with St. Luke’s. The best part of the story is saved for last when Cooley who had a rift with fellow surgeon Dr. Michael DeBakey for 40 years make up.
The book is written from an honest viewpoint and demonstrates how humble Cooley is. Not only does Cooley talk about his successes but he also talks about unfortunate situations. All in all though, Cooley’s memoir inspires the reader to make a difference in the world. Cooley has touched so many hearts yet many more lives.
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