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Technology

Life savers: A photo history of the artificial heart

By Andy Coghlan

27 November 2013

New Scientist. Science news and long reads from expert journalists, covering developments in science, technology, health and the environment on the website and the magazine.

(Image: Smithsonian)

DEAR Tin Man. If you really want a heart, forget the Wizard of Oz. Head instead to the Smithsonian Institution’s National Museum of American History in Washington DC. There you will find a dazzling history of artificial hearts, .

It may resemble a tea trolley, but this enormous contraption is one of the earliest heart-lung machines. Designed to temporarily stand in for the heart, these pumped blood around the body until the real one was up to the job again. Called , it was built in 1957.

Life savers: A photo history of the artificial heart

(Image: Smithsonian)

The owl-like device, pictured here, also bypasses the heart and lungs during operations, giving surgeons a “dry field” to work on. The was developed in 1952 by General Motors in Detroit, Michigan.

Life savers: A photo history of the artificial heart

(Image: Smithsonian)

Here we have a more modern device – a real replacement heart, made from plastic and titanium. Robert Tools was the first recipient of the AbioCor heart, in an operation on 2 July 2001 in the Jewish Hospital in Louisville, Kentucky. Fourteen people received before the company behind them, Abiomed, shifted to making the smaller hearts now used.

The take-home message? No wizards required.

See more artificial hearts at .

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