Harry J. Buncke
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'Harry J. Buncke', MD, is an American plastic surgeon who has been called "The Father of Microsurgery" for his contributions in the history and development of reconstructive microsurgical procedures. [1] He is a past president of the American Society for Surgery of the Hand, the International Society of Reconstructive Microsurgery, and the American Association of Plastic Surgery. He has served as a clinical professor of surgery at both Stanford University and the University of California - San Francisco. He is the author of 15 movies and television tapes, four surgical textbooks, and more than 400 peer-reviewed publications. [2]
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[edit] Education
Dr. Buncke attended Lehigh University in Bethlehem, Pennsylvania, and earned his medical degree from the New York Medical College in 1951. [3]
[edit] Career
Buncke's work began in a laboratory which he set up in his garage, using instruments and sutures he developed. In 1964, he reported a rabbit ear replantation to the Plastic Surgery Research Council Meeting in Kansas City, Kansas.[1] This was the first report of successfully using blood vessels 1 millimeter in size, an achievement previously thought to be technically impossible.
In 1966, Buncke and colleagues reported the transplantation of a monkey great toe to hand using microsurgery, a second landmark that ushered in an era where replantation of amputated digits and extremities would become widely performed.[2]
With Dr. Donald McLean, Buncke performed the first successful microvascular transplant using omentum to fill a large scalp defect In 1969.[3][4].
In 1970, Buncke founded the Buncke Clinic [5] at the Davies Medical Center in San Francisco, California. Surgeons at this clinic went on to accomplish many 'firsts', including a human toe-to-hand transplant[4], scalp replantations[5], serratus-combined-latissimus microvascular transplants, four-digit replantion and, in 1997, the replantation of a severed tongue.[6]
[edit] Footnotes
- ^ Buncke H, Schulz W (1966). "Total ear reimplantation in the rabbit utilising microminiature vascular anastomoses.". Br J Plast Surg 19 (1): 15-22. PMID 5909469.
- ^ Buncke H, Buncke C, Schulz W (1966). "Immediate Nicoladoni procedure in the Rhesus monkey, or hallux-to-hand transplantation, utilising microminiature vascular anastomoses.". Br J Plast Surg 19 (4): 332-7. PMID 4959061.
- ^ McLean D, Buncke H (1972). "Autotransplant of omentum to a large scalp defect, with microsurgical revascularization.". Plast Reconstr Surg 49 (3): 268-74. PMID 4551236.
- ^ Buncke H, McLean D, George P, Creech B, Chater N, Commons G (1973). "Thumb replacement: great toe transplantation by microvascular anastomosis.". Br J Plast Surg 26 (3): 194-201. PMID 4726099.
- ^ Buncke H, Rose E, Brownstein M, Chater N (1978). "Successful replantation of two avulsed scalps by microvascular anastomoses.". Plast Reconstr Surg 61 (5): 666-72. PMID 643955.
- ^ Buntic R, Buncke H (1998). "Successful replantation of an amputated tongue.". Plast Reconstr Surg 101 (6): 1604-7. PMID 9583492.
[edit] External links
- Rudy Buntic, Darrell Brooks, Charles K. Lee, Greg Buncke, Harry Buncke (2006-02-26). Microsurgery History. www.microsurgeon.org. Retrieved on 2006-07-08. - website part written by this surgeon.
- CPMC.org - "Dr. Harry Buncke's reputation is legendary as the 'father of microsurgery.'" California Pacific Medical Center
- CPMC.org - 'Pioneering Microsurgery: Offering Hope to Trauma Victims, Harry J. Buncke, MD Gregory M. Buncke, MD', California Pacific Medical Center
- SFGate.com - 'Saving limbs is a family business at the Buncke Clinic', Sam Whiting, San Francisco Chronicle (May 21, 2006