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D. Geraint James

David Geraint James FRCP (2 January 1922 – 20 October 2010) was a Welsh physician who devoted his career to the treatment of sarcoidosis, setting up a specialist clinic for the condition and earning the nickname "King of Sarcoid".[1]

D. Geraint James
Born2 January 1922
Treherbert, Wales
Died20 October 2010(2010-10-20) (aged 88)
Education
Known for
  • Research in sarcoidosis
  • Co-founder of WASOG
  • Co-founder of the BSHM
Medical career
Institutions
Sub-specialtiesRheumatology
ResearchSarcoidosis

In 1958, he organised the first international conference on sarcoidosis, and was instrumental in the setting up of the World Association of Sarcoidosis and other Granulomatous Disorders (WASOG) in 1987.

James was involved in a number of societies including the Medical Society of London and the Osler Club of London, which he represented at the formation of the first committee of the British Society for the History of Medicine (BSHM) in 1965.

Early life and education edit

David Geraint James, also known as Gerry,[1] was born on 2 January 1922 in the mining village of Treherbert, Rhondda Fawr Valley, Wales. His father, local headmaster David James,[2] wrote a regular column in Welsh for The Western Mail, a daily national paper.[3] James had one step brother, Arnold, from his father's first marriage, who later became the town clerk of Stepney. James's mother, Sarah (née Davies) who was widowed, had a family farm in Llanarth, near New Quay, Cardiganshire and already had three daughters when she married James's father. James was her fourth child and was just six years old when his father died.[2]

James became an active member of Urdd Gobaith Cymru (Welsh League of Youth) by the age of 10. He was fluent in both Welsh and English, giving speeches in both languages. He also played the organ and rugby. After attending Pen-Yr-Englyn primary school and then the Rhondda County School for Boys, his interest in science and ambition to study medicine lured him to Pontypridd County School.[2][3]

In 1939, he joined Jesus College, a Welsh college at the University of Cambridge[4] and subsequently gained admission to the Middlesex Hospital, London, to study medicine.[1] In June 1941 at the age of 19, he gained a bachelor's degree with honours in the National Science Tripos of anatomy, physiology, and biochemistry.[4]

Second World War edit

During his time as a student at the Middlesex Hospital, James assisted the casualties of The Blitz. With colleagues, he transported the wounded to safety and fire-watched at night.[4] In addition, during the Second World War, James served in the Royal Navy working as physician to a small fleet of minesweepers in the English Channel.[4]

Medical career edit

He completed house posts and early training with both George Ernest Beaumont at the Brompton Chest Hospital and the Middlesex Hospital and with Professor John Scadding at the Brompton Hospital and the Hammersmith Hospital, where he first became interested in Sheila Sherlock, who he later married, and sarcoidosis, a condition that was a specialism of Scadding.[3]

In 1950, James took Sheila with him to New York, to work at the New York Presbyterian Hospital, where he researched viral pneumonia for which his thesis on the topic later gained him an MD. In New York, he was influenced by Louis Siltzbach's large sarcoidosis clinic and his diagnostic tool, the kveim test, which James later renamed the Kveim-Siltzbach test.[2]

James returned to the Middlesex Hospital in 1951 with a large supply of kveim antigen given to him by Siltzbach.[2] Initially he configured a classification of sarcoidosis and according to the type, made suggestions for treatments. This was followed by further research into the immunology of the disease.[1] In 1956, the Middlesex awarded him a Leverhulme research scholarship for his efforts.[2]

In 1958, he organised the first international conference on sarcoidosis at the Brompton Hospital, at which 28 delegates, representing eight countries attended.[5][6] The meeting lasted for three days and was the first international conference on sarcoidosis. He was later involved in setting up the World Association of Sarcoidosis and other Granulomatous Disorders (WASOG) in 1987, in Milan, Italy and became its first president. Subsequently, with the personal financial support of Gianfranco Rizzato, the journal Sarcoidosis, later renamed Sarcoidosis Vasculitis and Diffuse Lung Diseases, became the association's official publication.[1][4] James became the journal's editor-in-chief and in 1987, the journal published a festschrift in his honour.[5][7]

In 1959, James was appointed consultant physician at London's Royal Northern Hospital and shortly after, began a specialist sarcoidosis clinic, which attracted rheumatologists from around the world. The clinics provided an abundance of people with the disease with referrals from around the country and carried out a number of clinical trials. His registrar at the time, Alimuddin Zumla, later described James as "an excellent teacher...if you listened to his lectures you would never forget them. He had a way of imparting knowledge that was special". James also encouraged a multidisciplinary approach in order to better understand the disease and according to Zumla, was intrigued by the mystery that surrounded sarcoidosis, a rare long-term disease with an unknown cause. "Gerry liked challenges", said Zumla.[1]

In 1959, with Gordon Beckett and Simon Behrman, he co-founded the Eye Physic Club.[2] From 1963 he was involved in a new medical eye unit which later moved to St Thomas’ Hospital. In 1968, he was appointed as dean to the Royal Northern Hospital. His private practice was at 149 Harley Street.[2]

James's lifetime work on sarcoidosis led him to be known as the "King of Sarcoid".[1][3]

History of medicine edit

In 1964 James was elected President of the Medical Society of London.[8][9] He was inspired by Jonathan Hutchinson, William Osler, and William Harvey. After the death of his wife Sheila in 2001, he wrote daily on the lives of notable medical men and women. His last two articles came were published in The History of Medical Biography.[4] In 1965, he represented the Osler Club of London when he was part of the founding committee of the British Society for the History of Medicine, along with William Copeman, Haldane Philp Tait, K. D. Keele, Douglas Guthrie, F. N. L. Poynter, Edwin Sisterton Clarke and Charles Newman.[10]

James was involved in a number of other societies, either as a member or as president, including the Cymmrodorion, the Glamorganshire Society, the Worshipful Society of Apothecaries, the Royal Society of Medicine, the Harveian, the Hunterian Society, the American Osler Society and the History of Medicine Society of Wales.[2]

Personal edit

In 1949, James met Sheila Sherlock, later Professor Dame Sheila Sherlock, the eminent hepatologist, at the Hammersmith Hospital.[4] On 15 December 1951 they married and they subsequently had two daughters, Amanda and Auriole.[11]

Death and legacy edit

James died on 20 October 2010.[12]

Selected publications edit

By 1958, James had written seven papers on sarcoidosis, two being on its effects on eyes, and had published his first book The diagnosis and treatment of infections (1957).[2] In addition, he authored more than 600 papers.[7]

In his 1985 book Major Problems in Internal Medicine Vol.24. Sarcoidosis and Other Granulomatous Disorders, co-authored with W. Jones, and published by W. B. Saunders, the clinical and diagnostic findings of James's 818 sarcoid patients covering a period of 30 years, are evaluated.[13]

In 1999, with Professor Alimuddin Zumla, he co-edited the standard textbook on the subject of sarcoidosis, The Granulomatous Disorders.[1]

Selected articles edit

  • James, D.Geraint (1959). "Ocular sarcoidosis". The American Journal of Medicine. 26 (3): 331–339. doi:10.1016/0002-9343(59)90242-6. PMID 13626988.
  • "The Riddle of Uveitis", Postgraduate Medical Journal (1964) 40, pp. 686–691
  • "Postgraduate medicine and personalities-1925", Postgraduate Medical Journal (1985)61, pp. 861–864
  • James, D Geraint (1995). "The Sarcoidosis Movement and Its Personalities". Journal of Medical Biography. 3 (3): 148–160. doi:10.1177/096777209500300305. PMID 11639833. S2CID 21982827.

Books and book chapters edit

  • James, Geraint D. (1993). "Oculo-Renal Sarcoidosis". Diseases Affecting the Eye and the Kidney: 389–399. doi:10.1159/000422072. ISBN 978-3-8055-5660-6.

See also edit

List of Welsh medical pioneers

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h Watts, Geoff (2010). "David Geraint James" (PDF). The Lancet. 376 (9755): 1822. doi:10.1016/S0140-6736(10)62158-7. S2CID 6011283.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j McIntyre, Neil (2010). "Munks Roll Details for David Geraint James". munksroll.rcplondon.ac.uk. Munks Roll. Retrieved 26 April 2019.
  3. ^ a b c d Sharma, Om Prakash; Zumla, A (2010). "David Geraint James" (PDF). British Medical Journal. 341: c6400. doi:10.1136/bmj.c6400. S2CID 58729586.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g . WASOG Key Papers - World Association of Sarcoidosis and Other Granulomatous Disorders. 8 May 2014. Archived from the original on 8 May 2014. Retrieved 25 April 2019.
  5. ^ a b Sharma, O. P. (2012). Mitchell, Donald; Wells, Athol; Spiro, Stephen; Moller, David (eds.). Sarcoidosis. Taylor & Francis Group. pp. 7–9. ISBN 9781444149821.
  6. ^ Baughman, Robert (2006). Sarcoidosis. Taylor & Francis Group. p. 3. ISBN 9780824759261.
  7. ^ a b "D.G.(Gerry) James". www.wasog.org. Retrieved 29 April 2019.
  8. ^ Cook, G. C. (1 February 2003). "Dr D G James FRCP and the Fellowship of Postgraduate Medicine". Postgraduate Medical Journal. 79 (928): 101. doi:10.1136/pmj.79.928.101. PMC 1742617. PMID 12612326.
  9. ^ "The Harveian Society of London Founded 1831 "ESTO PERPETUE"" (PDF). Harveian Society of London: 11.
  10. ^ "The British Society for the History of Medicine Foundation". Medical History. 9 (4): 390–391. 1965. doi:10.1017/s0025727300031069. PMC 1033538.
  11. ^ Booth, Christopher C (2005). "Sherlock, Dame Sheila Patricia Violet". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. Vol. 1 (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/76674. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)(subscription required)
  12. ^ ‘James, Dr (David) Geraint’, Who's Who, A & C Black, an imprint of Bloomsbury Publishing plc, 1920–2014; online edn, Oxford University Press, 2014 ; online edn, April 2014 accessed 8 May 2014
  13. ^ Stack, B. H. R. (1 June 1986). "Book Reviews" (PDF). Postgraduate Medical Journal. 62: 506. doi:10.1136/pgmj.62.728.506-a. S2CID 72858473.

Further reading edit

  • Bearn, AG (1987). "D. Geraint James. An appreciation". Sarcoidosis. 4 Suppl 1: 6–9. PMID 3313594.
  • Sharma, O. P.; Zumla, A. (2010). "David Geraint James". BMJ. 341: c6400. doi:10.1136/bmj.c6400. S2CID 58729586.
  • Sharma, Om P. (2011). Gerry James and the Sarcoidosis Movement. Ithaca Press. ASIN B005LDC8EC.

geraint, james, welsh, rugby, union, player, geraint, james, rugby, union, david, geraint, james, frcp, january, 1922, october, 2010, welsh, physician, devoted, career, treatment, sarcoidosis, setting, specialist, clinic, condition, earning, nickname, king, sa. For the Welsh rugby union player see Geraint James rugby union David Geraint James FRCP 2 January 1922 20 October 2010 was a Welsh physician who devoted his career to the treatment of sarcoidosis setting up a specialist clinic for the condition and earning the nickname King of Sarcoid 1 D Geraint JamesBorn2 January 1922Treherbert WalesDied20 October 2010 2010 10 20 aged 88 EducationJesus College Middlesex HospitalKnown forResearch in sarcoidosis Co founder of WASOG Co founder of the BSHMMedical careerInstitutionsRoyal Northern Hospital Hammersmith Hospital Brompton Chest HospitalSub specialtiesRheumatologyResearchSarcoidosis In 1958 he organised the first international conference on sarcoidosis and was instrumental in the setting up of the World Association of Sarcoidosis and other Granulomatous Disorders WASOG in 1987 James was involved in a number of societies including the Medical Society of London and the Osler Club of London which he represented at the formation of the first committee of the British Society for the History of Medicine BSHM in 1965 Contents 1 Early life and education 2 Second World War 3 Medical career 4 History of medicine 5 Personal 6 Death and legacy 7 Selected publications 7 1 Selected articles 7 2 Books and book chapters 8 See also 9 References 10 Further readingEarly life and education editDavid Geraint James also known as Gerry 1 was born on 2 January 1922 in the mining village of Treherbert Rhondda Fawr Valley Wales His father local headmaster David James 2 wrote a regular column in Welsh for The Western Mail a daily national paper 3 James had one step brother Arnold from his father s first marriage who later became the town clerk of Stepney James s mother Sarah nee Davies who was widowed had a family farm in Llanarth near New Quay Cardiganshire and already had three daughters when she married James s father James was her fourth child and was just six years old when his father died 2 James became an active member of Urdd Gobaith Cymru Welsh League of Youth by the age of 10 He was fluent in both Welsh and English giving speeches in both languages He also played the organ and rugby After attending Pen Yr Englyn primary school and then the Rhondda County School for Boys his interest in science and ambition to study medicine lured him to Pontypridd County School 2 3 In 1939 he joined Jesus College a Welsh college at the University of Cambridge 4 and subsequently gained admission to the Middlesex Hospital London to study medicine 1 In June 1941 at the age of 19 he gained a bachelor s degree with honours in the National Science Tripos of anatomy physiology and biochemistry 4 Second World War editDuring his time as a student at the Middlesex Hospital James assisted the casualties of The Blitz With colleagues he transported the wounded to safety and fire watched at night 4 In addition during the Second World War James served in the Royal Navy working as physician to a small fleet of minesweepers in the English Channel 4 Medical career editHe completed house posts and early training with both George Ernest Beaumont at the Brompton Chest Hospital and the Middlesex Hospital and with Professor John Scadding at the Brompton Hospital and the Hammersmith Hospital where he first became interested in Sheila Sherlock who he later married and sarcoidosis a condition that was a specialism of Scadding 3 In 1950 James took Sheila with him to New York to work at the New York Presbyterian Hospital where he researched viral pneumonia for which his thesis on the topic later gained him an MD In New York he was influenced by Louis Siltzbach s large sarcoidosis clinic and his diagnostic tool the kveim test which James later renamed the Kveim Siltzbach test 2 James returned to the Middlesex Hospital in 1951 with a large supply of kveim antigen given to him by Siltzbach 2 Initially he configured a classification of sarcoidosis and according to the type made suggestions for treatments This was followed by further research into the immunology of the disease 1 In 1956 the Middlesex awarded him a Leverhulme research scholarship for his efforts 2 In 1958 he organised the first international conference on sarcoidosis at the Brompton Hospital at which 28 delegates representing eight countries attended 5 6 The meeting lasted for three days and was the first international conference on sarcoidosis He was later involved in setting up the World Association of Sarcoidosis and other Granulomatous Disorders WASOG in 1987 in Milan Italy and became its first president Subsequently with the personal financial support of Gianfranco Rizzato the journal Sarcoidosis later renamed Sarcoidosis Vasculitis and Diffuse Lung Diseases became the association s official publication 1 4 James became the journal s editor in chief and in 1987 the journal published a festschrift in his honour 5 7 In 1959 James was appointed consultant physician at London s Royal Northern Hospital and shortly after began a specialist sarcoidosis clinic which attracted rheumatologists from around the world The clinics provided an abundance of people with the disease with referrals from around the country and carried out a number of clinical trials His registrar at the time Alimuddin Zumla later described James as an excellent teacher if you listened to his lectures you would never forget them He had a way of imparting knowledge that was special James also encouraged a multidisciplinary approach in order to better understand the disease and according to Zumla was intrigued by the mystery that surrounded sarcoidosis a rare long term disease with an unknown cause Gerry liked challenges said Zumla 1 In 1959 with Gordon Beckett and Simon Behrman he co founded the Eye Physic Club 2 From 1963 he was involved in a new medical eye unit which later moved to St Thomas Hospital In 1968 he was appointed as dean to the Royal Northern Hospital His private practice was at 149 Harley Street 2 James s lifetime work on sarcoidosis led him to be known as the King of Sarcoid 1 3 History of medicine editIn 1964 James was elected President of the Medical Society of London 8 9 He was inspired by Jonathan Hutchinson William Osler and William Harvey After the death of his wife Sheila in 2001 he wrote daily on the lives of notable medical men and women His last two articles came were published in The History of Medical Biography 4 In 1965 he represented the Osler Club of London when he was part of the founding committee of the British Society for the History of Medicine along with William Copeman Haldane Philp Tait K D Keele Douglas Guthrie F N L Poynter Edwin Sisterton Clarke and Charles Newman 10 James was involved in a number of other societies either as a member or as president including the Cymmrodorion the Glamorganshire Society the Worshipful Society of Apothecaries the Royal Society of Medicine the Harveian the Hunterian Society the American Osler Society and the History of Medicine Society of Wales 2 Personal editIn 1949 James met Sheila Sherlock later Professor Dame Sheila Sherlock the eminent hepatologist at the Hammersmith Hospital 4 On 15 December 1951 they married and they subsequently had two daughters Amanda and Auriole 11 Death and legacy editJames died on 20 October 2010 12 Selected publications editBy 1958 James had written seven papers on sarcoidosis two being on its effects on eyes and had published his first book The diagnosis and treatment of infections 1957 2 In addition he authored more than 600 papers 7 In his 1985 book Major Problems in Internal Medicine Vol 24 Sarcoidosis and Other Granulomatous Disorders co authored with W Jones and published by W B Saunders the clinical and diagnostic findings of James s 818 sarcoid patients covering a period of 30 years are evaluated 13 In 1999 with Professor Alimuddin Zumla he co edited the standard textbook on the subject of sarcoidosis The Granulomatous Disorders 1 Selected articles edit James D Geraint 1959 Ocular sarcoidosis The American Journal of Medicine 26 3 331 339 doi 10 1016 0002 9343 59 90242 6 PMID 13626988 The Riddle of Uveitis Postgraduate Medical Journal 1964 40 pp 686 691 Postgraduate medicine and personalities 1925 Postgraduate Medical Journal 1985 61 pp 861 864 James D Geraint 1995 The Sarcoidosis Movement and Its Personalities Journal of Medical Biography 3 3 148 160 doi 10 1177 096777209500300305 PMID 11639833 S2CID 21982827 Books and book chapters edit James Geraint D 1993 Oculo Renal Sarcoidosis Diseases Affecting the Eye and the Kidney 389 399 doi 10 1159 000422072 ISBN 978 3 8055 5660 6 See also editList of Welsh medical pioneersReferences edit a b c d e f g h Watts Geoff 2010 David Geraint James PDF The Lancet 376 9755 1822 doi 10 1016 S0140 6736 10 62158 7 S2CID 6011283 a b c d e f g h i j McIntyre Neil 2010 Munks Roll Details for David Geraint James munksroll rcplondon ac uk Munks Roll Retrieved 26 April 2019 a b c d Sharma Om Prakash Zumla A 2010 David Geraint James PDF British Medical Journal 341 c6400 doi 10 1136 bmj c6400 S2CID 58729586 a b c d e f g In Memoriam David Geraint James WASOG Key Papers World Association of Sarcoidosis and Other Granulomatous Disorders 8 May 2014 Archived from the original on 8 May 2014 Retrieved 25 April 2019 a b Sharma O P 2012 Mitchell Donald Wells Athol Spiro Stephen Moller David eds Sarcoidosis Taylor amp Francis Group pp 7 9 ISBN 9781444149821 Baughman Robert 2006 Sarcoidosis Taylor amp Francis Group p 3 ISBN 9780824759261 a b D G Gerry James www wasog org Retrieved 29 April 2019 Cook G C 1 February 2003 Dr D G James FRCP and the Fellowship of Postgraduate Medicine Postgraduate Medical Journal 79 928 101 doi 10 1136 pmj 79 928 101 PMC 1742617 PMID 12612326 The Harveian Society of London Founded 1831 ESTO PERPETUE PDF Harveian Society of London 11 The British Society for the History of Medicine Foundation Medical History 9 4 390 391 1965 doi 10 1017 s0025727300031069 PMC 1033538 Booth Christopher C 2005 Sherlock Dame Sheila Patricia Violet Oxford Dictionary of National Biography Vol 1 online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 76674 Subscription or UK public library membership required subscription required James Dr David Geraint Who s Who A amp C Black an imprint of Bloomsbury Publishing plc 1920 2014 online edn Oxford University Press 2014 online edn April 2014 accessed 8 May 2014 Stack B H R 1 June 1986 Book Reviews PDF Postgraduate Medical Journal 62 506 doi 10 1136 pgmj 62 728 506 a S2CID 72858473 Further reading editBearn AG 1987 D Geraint James An appreciation Sarcoidosis 4 Suppl 1 6 9 PMID 3313594 Sharma O P Zumla A 2010 David Geraint James BMJ 341 c6400 doi 10 1136 bmj c6400 S2CID 58729586 Sharma Om P 2011 Gerry James and the Sarcoidosis Movement Ithaca Press ASIN B005LDC8EC Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title D Geraint James amp oldid 1211909438, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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