June 14 – On This Day in Medical History
Medical milestones, landmark publications, and notable births and deaths associated with June 14.
Events
1935 – Frederic Eugene Basil Foley (1891-1966) first publicly exhibited his self-retaining balloon catheter (Foley catheter) at the American Medical Association meeting in Atlantic City. Foley demonstrated an inflatable intravesical balloon designed to keep a urethral catheter in place while providing bladder drainage (and originally, haemostasis after prostate surgery).
Births
1851 – Ernst Fuchs (1851-1930), Austrian ophthalmologist; described Fuchs Corneal dystrophy (1910), Fuchs Spots (1901), Fuchs Dellen (aka Fuchs dimples)
1868 – Karl Landsteiner (1868-1943), Austrian-American immunologist; best known for identifying the ABO blood group system (1901)
1901 – Anton Jervell (1901-1987), Norwegian cardiologist; described Jervell and Lange-Nielsen syndrome (JLNS) (1957)
1920 – Charles Theodore Dotter (1920-1985), American radiologist performed the first intentional percutaneous transluminal angioplasty (1964)
Deaths
1984 – Dmitry Alekseyevich Arapov (1897-1984), Russian military surgeon; described Arapov Contracture (1968)
1961 – Edgar van Nuys Allen (1900-1961), American physician; described the Allen Test (1929) and published the first clinical description of lipedema
2023 – Peter Herbert Beighton (1934-2023) was a British-born physician, clinical geneticist, and medical researcher; defined the Beighton Score (1971)
Further reading
- Foley FEB. A Hemostatic Bag Catheter: A One Piece Latex Rubber Structure for Control of Bleeding and Constant Drainage Following Prostatic Resection. J Urol 1937; 38(1): 134-139.
BA MA (Oxon) MBChB (Edin) FACEM FFSEM. Emergency physician, Sir Charles Gairdner Hospital. Passion for rugby; medical history; medical education; and asynchronous learning #FOAMed evangelist. Co-founder and CTO of Life in the Fast lane | On Call: Principles and Protocol 4e| Eponyms | Books |
