- Folkman, (Moses) Judah
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▪ 2009American surgeon and medical researcherborn Feb. 24, 1933, Cleveland, Ohiodied Jan. 14, 2008, Denver, Colo.spent four decades investigating the relationship between the growth of malignant tumours and angiogenesis (the process of blood vessel development); by 1998 he had developed two drugs that had completely eliminated any type of cancerous tumours in mice, although the drugs were less effective in humans. After graduating from Ohio State University (B.A., 1953), Folkman entered Harvard Medical School (M.D., 1957). There he developed the first atrioventricular pacemaker, a discovery for which he won the first of many awards. As assistant resident (1960–62) at the National Naval Medical Center, he began his tumour-growth studies and also discovered, with David Long, a polymer that facilitated the sustained release of drugs and came to be used in implantable contraceptives. From 1967 to 1981 he served as surgeon in chief and chairman of the department of surgery at Children's Hospital Boston, where he later became director of the surgical research laboratory. In 1981 Folkman resigned as pediatric surgeon to focus on angiogenesis research.
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Universalium. 2010.