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Respiratory Physiology: People and Ideas (People and Ideas Series) [Hardcover]

John B. West (Editor)


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Book Description

0195080815 978-0195080810 June 20, 1996 1
Present-day respiratory physiology stems largely from the explosion of ideas which took place during and after World War II. A number of the major players are still active, but the opportunity to prepare a personal history of this branch of medicine will soon be lost. In a sense then, this book offers an exceptional, even unique, opportunity. We are offered a first-hand chronicle of the advancements made in respiratory physiology in the course of this century by one of the principal figures in the field. The volume covers every aspect of the evolution of this important area of knowledge: morphology, gas exchange and blood flow, mechanics, control of ventillation, and comparative physiology. Some of the chapters are personal accounts of the development of respiratory physiology as observed by the author. It is hoped that what is lost in objectivity by this approach is more than made up by the captivating insights provided by the author into the process of scientific research and discovery.

Editorial Reviews

Review

"Contains interesting and often amusing information about the founders of respiratory physiology, with a minimum of complicated diagrams and jargon."The New England Journal of Medicine

"It seems clear that one can acquire an understanding of current concepts a bit faster, and with considerably less pain, with a historical perspective in addition to the latest www.xxx.edu download. There is the true worth of this interesting book....All the contributors to this text have amply demonstrated a remarkable range of knowledge, culled from disparate sources, and the vision to focus that information in a meaningful way on their lifework."--Journal of the American Medical Association

"This is as close to being impossible to put down as any scientific book I have seen....The names of the contribitors ensure success....They provide accounts that are uniformly of high quality and entirely suitable as an introduction to respiratory physiology for the budding researcher....What the reader gets is...the excitement of the research, the interactions between people from different backgrounds, the discussions and the times when the light suddenly switches on are vividly presented."--Canadian Respiratory Journal

"Many photographs, often worderfully informal...Delightful read for students of all ages who wish to learn more about the development of current concepts in pulmonary physiology."--Annals of Royal College of Physians and surgeons of Canada

"An informative, entertaining and higly readable account for any with an interest in the field. It is full of landmark graphs and diagrams, formal portraits and informal photographs of the players and their early laboratories and equipment."--Canadian Journal Physiology

"...a wonderful volume that preserves the very personal stories of many of the 'giants' of physiology, outlines the current state of our knowledge, and points out the directions that future research may take."-- Chest July 2000

noted in University of Toronto Medical Journal

About the Author

John B. West, Professor of Medicine and Physiology, University of California, San Diego.

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 448 pages
  • Publisher: Oxford University Press, USA; 1 edition (June 20, 1996)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0195080815
  • ISBN-13: 978-0195080810
  • Product Dimensions: 9.4 x 6.4 x 1.2 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 2.8 pounds
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #2,385,989 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

More About the Author

UCSD School of Medicine Logo
photo of John B. West
John B. West, M.D., Ph.D., D.Sc.
Distinguished Professor of Medicine and Physiology
School of Medicine
University of California, San Diego
San Diego, CA 92093-0623A
Tel: (858) 534-4192
FAX: (858) 534-4812
E-mail: jwest@ucsd.edu

* Formal Curriculm Vitae
* Brief Narrative CV
* Publications:
o Books
o Articles

John West was born in Adelaide, Australia in 1928. He had the good fortune to attend an excellent high school and developed a love of science, particularly high energy physics. He considered this for a career but as was the custom then (and still is) he moved straight from high school to one of the faculties of the University of Adelaide and, for various reasons, chose medicine. He graduated with a medical degree in 1951 after the six years' course at the age of 23. After a year of residency he moved to London, partly because academic medicine was not well developed in Adelaide at the time, but also because he wanted to see the world.

He spent about 15 years in London, mainly at the Royal Postgraduate Medical School, Hammersmith Hospital, initially with Drs. Philip Hugh-Jones and Charles Fletcher. A remarkably serendipitous event occurred in 1956 when the Medical Research Council cyclotron started to produce radioactive oxygen-15. By inhaling this and looking at its disappearance from the lung, it became clear that there was a dramatic topographical inequality of blood flow caused by gravity. The mechanism of this was worked out, and this led to other studies on the effects of gravity on the lung including regional differences of ventilation, gas exchange, and alveolar size.

In 1960 he learned that Sir Edmund Hillary was planning a physiological expedition to the Himalayas, and he applied and was accepted in spite of the fact that he had never previously done any climbing. This was the so-called Silver Hut expedition where a small group of physiologists wintered at an altitude of 5800 m (19,000 ft) just south of Everest and carried out an extensive physiological program. Subsequently measurements were extended up to an altitude of 7440 m (24,400 ft) on Mt. Makalu. This began a long interest in high-altitude medicine and physiology and culminated in him leading the 1981 American Medical Research Expedition to Everest during which 5 people reached the summit, and the first physiological measurements on the summit were made. The basic scientific question addressed in these studies is how is it possible for humans to survive in the extreme oxygen deprivation of these great altitudes which are right at the limit of human tolerance. His interest in this field continues to this day with a project on oxygen enrichment of room air at high altitude which promises to be critically important for commuters who need to work at very high altitudes. He also edits a new journal, High Altitude Medicine & Biology.

Because of his interest in the effects of gravity on the lung, he thought it would be valuable to study the lung in weightlessness, and took a period of sabbatical leave at the NASA Ames Research Center in 1967-1968. During this time he submitted a proposal to NASA to study pulmonary function in astronauts. This was funded the following year and he enjoyed continuous financial support from NASA until 2006. Experiments were conducted on four Spacelabs in orbit, and on the International Space Station. Of all the organs in the body, the lung is arguably the most vulnerable to gravity, and the basic question here is how is lung function altered by exposure to weightlessness in both the short and long terms. A monograph on pulmonary function in space has recently been published by his group.

Dr. West joined the faculty of the University of California San Diego in the spring of 1969 and has been there ever since. His research has ranged over a wide field including an extensive study of ventilation-perfusion inequality in the lung. He continues an interest in the pulmonary circulation and particularly the dilemma of the blood-gas barrier which has to be both extremely thin and immensely strong. When the pressure in the pulmonary capillaries becomes high, or the lung is inflated to large volumes, stress failure of the walls of the capillaries occurs, and this phenomenon is important in a variety of lung diseases. He is addressing the basic biological question of how the blood-gas barrier of the lung is regulated so that it is sufficiently thin for efficient gas exchange yet strong enough to avoid stress failure.

Dr. West is a dedicated teacher. He was in charge of the physiology course for first year medical students at UCSD for 35 years and his little red book Respiratory Physiology: The Essentials has been translated into 13 languages and is used all over the world. He also has a strong interest in the history of medicine and has written several books on the subject. His monograph High Life is a standard history of high altitude physiology and medicine. He has developed an archival collection of material in high-altitude medicine and physiology for the special archival library at the University of California, San Diego.

Dr. West has had many honors including president of the American Physiological Society, foreign member of the Russian Academy of Sciences, founding fellow of the American Institute for Medical and Biological Engineering, honorary doctorates from the universities of Barcelona, Ferrara and Athens, fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, and member of the Institute of Medicine of the National Academy of Sciences.
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Last updated September 12, 2008.
©2008 John B. West. All rights reserved.

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