Robert Gross
Born in 1905, Gross graduated with honors from Carleton College and the
Harvard Medical School. After spending 2 years in pathology, he entered
his surgical training at the Peter Brent Brigham Hospital and at the
Boston Children's Hospital with Dr. William E. Ladd, who occupied the
first Chair of Pediatric Surgery in the United States. After 3 years of
basic training with a wide variety of surgical problems in both adults
and children, he decided to devote his considerable talents toward
solving some of the problems of children with congenital malformations.
After having returned to Harvard to assume the Chief Residency in
Surgery at the Boston Children's Hospital, he worked out a surgical
approach to the closure of the patent ductus arteriosus, and he
performed the first successful ligation of this structure. Two years
later, Gross co-authored with Dr. Ladd Abdominal Surgery of Infancy and
Childhood. In the laboratory Gross was actively pursuing the treatment
of anomalies of the heart and great vessels. With Dr. Charles Hufnagel,
he developed a practical method of preserving, sterilizing, and using
aortic homografts to bridge damaged aortic areas, and thus introduced
modern reconstructive vascular surgery. In 1947 Gross was named
Professor of Children's Surgery at Harvard Medical School and
Surgeon-in-Chief of the Boston Children's Hospital. His contributions to
the literature included the classic textbook Surgery of Infancy and
Childhood. Gross was elected President of the American Association for
Thoracic Surgery in 1964, and served as the first President of the newly
formed American Pediatric Surgical Association in 1970.
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