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P. K. Sen (surgeon)

Prafulla Kumar Sen MD (7 December 1915 – 22 July 1982) was an Indian vascular and cardiothoracic surgeon, who led the world's sixth attempt of human heart transplant and India's first in 1968. It dubbed him the fourth surgeon in the world to carry out this operation.

Prafulla Kumar Sen
Born7 December 1915
Died22 July 1982
NationalityIndian
EducationUniversity of Bombay
OccupationCardiothoracic surgeon
Known forConducting the first human heart transplant in India (1968)
RelativesMarie Barnes
Medical career
InstitutionsKing Edward Memorial Hospital and Seth Gordhandas Sunderdas Medical College
Sub-specialtiesTransplant surgery
AwardsPadma Bhushan

Sen was active in establishing postgraduate programmes in surgical training and one of the early surgeons to perform aortic surgery in India in the 1950s. After being the first in India to perform a closed mitral valvotomy in 1952, within a year he repaired a coarctation of the aorta and by 1956 he had successfully attempted the first direct vision closure of an atrial septal defect. In the 1950s he turned his attention from aortic surgery to open heart surgery following numerous experiments on dogs. He subsequently led teams that performed two heart transplants in Bombay in 1968. Both recipients died on the day of their operation.

Sen was, in addition, a poet and painter. His paintings were displayed once in the United States, and twice in India.

Early life and education edit

Prafulla Kumar Sen, popularly known as P. K. Sen,[1] was born on 7 December 1915 in Calcutta, British India.[2] He had one sister and his father was a civil servant.[3]

He began his early education at a public school in Jamtada, Bihar,[3] before attending the Victoria College of Sciences, Nagpur. Subsequently, Sen gained admission to medicine at the G.S. Medical College, Bombay, where he studied between 1933 and 1938, before passing his MBBS. In 1940, he achieved a distinction in his master of surgery (MS) degree at the University of Bombay.[2]

Surgical career edit

Sen's internships and surgical training were completed at King Edward VII Memorial Hospital (KEM), Bombay between 1938 and 1943, after which he returned to G.S. Medical College as assistant honorary surgeon.[3] Initially, he received aid from the Indian Council for Medical Research (ICMR). He was frequently in dispute with the Bombay Municipal Corporation who were more concerned with providing for diseases of poverty and over population. However, he was ambitious, a "buccaneer" and had a wish to extend Indian medicine into the rapidly growing and exciting arena of open heart surgery.[4] He was inspired by Charaka but also paid tribute to Western medical pioneers including John Hunter and Alexis Carrel.[4]

Pennsylvania edit

In 1949, following an application for a Rockefeller Foundation fellowship and the subsequent endorsement by Isidor Schwaner Ravdin, chair of surgery at the University of Pennsylvania at their request, Sen travelled to the University of Pennsylvania in the United States to work for six months with thoracic surgeon James Hardy. Their research on the "impact of surgery on adrenocortical activity" was presented at the American College of Surgeons in Boston in October 1950 and later, amidst the backdrop of racial unrest in the U.S. and an incident in which Sen was nearly barred from a hotel, at the American Physiological Society in Atlanta. Before returning to India in 1952, Sen visited surgical research centres all over the United States including Minneapolis, New York and Baltimore. In addition, he visited London and Sweden. Over the next fifteen years, he obtained another two travel fellowships to the U.S., with assistance from the Rockefeller foundation.[4]

Return to India edit

In 1952, he was appointed to KEM Hospital as honorary surgeon, but soon left to take up the post of director professor of surgery at G.S. Medical College, the post he held until his retirement in 1973.[3]

He initially worked in experimental and clinical research, but was later active in establishing postgraduate qualifications in cardiothoracic surgery during a period in which he also founded specialist departments at G.S. Medical college and the KEM Hospital, including gastrointestinal and hepatic surgery, sports medicine and oncology.[2]

Early cardiovascular surgery edit

In addition to North American networks, Rockefeller support and funding, and the ICMR,[4] Sen was also influenced by Soviet surgeons, particularly Vladimir Demikhov. Along with other KEM Hospital cardiothoracic surgeons including M. D. Kelkar, G. B. Parulkar who established the technique of hypothermic circulatory arrest in resection of aortic aneurysm and T. P.Kulkarni who described tuberculous aortitis, Sen was one of the first to perform aortic surgery in the 1950s, laying the foundations at first for aortic surgery and than later open heart surgery in India.[5]

In 1952, following the adaptation of American techniques and after 25 dog experiments, he successfully performed the first intra-cardiac procedure in India by pushing his finger through a rheumatic mitral valve (closed mitral valvotomy) via a cut made in the right atrium of a beating heart.[2][4] In 1953, he repaired a coarctation of the aorta and by 1956 he had successfully attempted the first direct vision closure of an atrial septal defect under hypothermia and inflow occlusion.[6] Around the same time, he initiated other vascular repair procedures on the Aorta for the surgical treatment of Aortitis and Aortic aneurysms.[2]

By 1957, Sen had completed his second travel fellowship and tour of major North American and European cardiac centres. In addition, on his return to India, he hosted foreign delegates, one of whom was William Heneage Ogilvie (of Ogilvie syndrome), in early 1958.[4]

He was at first skeptical of heart-lung machines and concentrated chiefly on hypothermia in his transplant surgery, but by the early 1960s he had secured Rockefeller funding to train a group of Indian surgeons and scientists in surgery using heart-lung machines. In 1962 following the death of a child whilst repairing a ventricular septal defect with the assistance of a heart- lung machine, Sen made his third and final overseas Rockefeller tour which included Japan, Mexico, much of the U.S. and the United Kingdom. He concluded in Moscow with a visit to Demikhov, who had recently achieved fame with his dog heart and head transplants. This came at a time when the Indian government was "actively cultivating ties to the Soviet Union".[4]

First Indian human heart transplant edit

Sen and his team tested their techniques on hundreds of dogs between 1962 and 1964.[4][7] In 1965, three out of five dogs who underwent cardiopulmonary transplants were able to breath after surgery without artificial ventilation. All the dogs had survivals from 5 to 12 hours.[8]

James Hardy, who had previously supervised Sen on his first fellowship at Pennsylvania in 1950, had by 1964 transplanted a chimpanzee heart into a human. Two years later, Hardy visited Bombay and spoke at G.S. Medical College about transplants.[4]

On 16 February 1968, Sen led the team that performed the first human heart transplant in India, and only the sixth in the world.[3] He was the fourth surgeon in the world to attempt this, the previous three surgeons being Christiaan Barnard, Norman Shumway and Adrian Kantrowitz.[4] The recipient was a male farmer with severe progressive cardiomyopathy who had been admitted to hospital in the previous six months. It took one month from the decision to transplant to find a donor.[4] The patient was to be given the heart of a 20 year old Maharashtrian woman who had sustained severe head injuries after falling from a train. The operation began just after midnight on 17 February 1968.[4] The farmer died from heart failure within three hours of the operation.[9][10] The operation was not publicised as widely as previous heart transplants, particularly those of Barnard and Shumway.[11] With less media coverage than numerous other early heart transplants, Sen's heart transplant in February 1968, was before any in Europe, Canada, Australia, Japan or the Soviet Union.[12]

Sen believed India had a vast potential as a transplant centre with a wealth of donor organs resulting from accidents on its disordered roads and railways.[4]

On 13 September 1968, he performed the second human heart transplant in India. The donor was a 25 year old road traffic accident victim and the recipient, a youth. Severe pulmonary hypertension developed within a few hours of the operation and the recipient died within 14 hours. No further attempts at heart transplants were made in India until Panangipalli Venugopal led the first successful heart transplant in India, at the All India Institute of Medical Sciences (AIIMS) in Delhi in 1994 and after new laws had been passed relating to "brain death".[9][10] KEM did not carry out any further heart transplants until 2015.[13]

1970s edit

Sen's contributions to the procedure of myocardial acupuncture in ischaemic heart disease were followed by developments in aortic arch replacement. His students included Sharad Panday, M. S. Valiathan and S. I. Padmavati and he maintained contact with heart surgeons outside India such as William Bigelow, Denton Cooley, Donald Ross, Norman Shumway and Demikhov.[3][14]

Calcutta Hospital and Research Centre edit

From 1977, Sen practiced as a consultant cardiovascular and thoracic surgeon at Calcutta Hospital and Research Centre, where he remained until his death in 1982.[2]

Sen received the Indian Padma Bhushan award.[3][4]

Personal life edit

In 1950, Sen met Marie Barnes, an American physiologist from Philadelphia, while training there. They married in 1954. They had no children.[3]

He painted and wrote poetry. His paintings were displayed at one time in the United States, and twice in India.[3]

Death and legacy edit

Sen died on 22 July 1982 from a heart attack.[3] The department of cardiothoracic surgery at KEM was founded by him and now bears his name.[14] As a past president of the Association of Surgeons of India, the "Dr P. K. Sen memorial oration" was established in his honour in 1993 by the Indian Association of Cardiovascular-Thoracic Surgeons.[14][15]

Selected publications edit

  • SEN, PK; Kinare, SG; Engineer, SD; Parulkar, GB (1963). "The middle aortic syndrome". Br Heart J. 25: 610–8. doi:10.1136/hrt.25.5.610. PMC 1018042. PMID 14063008.
  • Sen, PK; Parulkar, GB; Panday, SR; Kinare, SG (1965). "Homologous canine heart transplantation: a preliminary report of 100 experiments". Indian J Med Res. 53: 674–84. PMID 5318259.
  • Sen, Prufalla K. (1968). "Human heart homotransplantation∗". The American Journal of Cardiology. 22: 826–832. doi:10.1016/0002-9149(68)90178-1..
  • SEN, PK; Udwadia, TE; Kinare, SG; Parulkar, GB (1965). "Transmyocardial acupuncture: A new approach to myocardial revascularization". J Thorac Cardiovasc Surg. 50: 181–9. doi:10.1016/s0022-5223(19)33205-2. PMID 14321516.

References edit

  1. ^ Hosain, Nazmul (1 January 1970). "Dr. P K Sen- the Bengali Surgeon of the Century". Cardiovascular Journal. 3 (2).
  2. ^ a b c d e f "Professor Prafulla Kumar Sen 1915~1982". Indian Journal of Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery. 1 (1): 92–94. 1 October 1982. doi:10.1007/BF02664159. ISSN 0970-9134.(subscription required)
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Mittal, Chander Mohan (2002). "Profulla Kumar Sen". Texas Heart Institute Journal. 29 (1): 17–25. ISSN 0730-2347. PMC 101263. PMID 11995843.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Jones, David S.; Sivaramakrishnan, Kavita (10 January 2018). "Transplant Buccaneers: P.K. Sen and India's First Heart Transplant, February 1968". Journal of the History of Medicine and Allied Sciences. 73 (3): 303–332. doi:10.1093/jhmas/jrx059. PMID 29329407.
  5. ^ Unnikrishan, Madathipat; Savlania, Ajay; Goura, Prakash; Tripathi, Ramesh K. (2016). "Aortic Disease and Management in India". In Alan Dardik (ed.). Vascular Surgery: A Global Perspective. Springer. p. 64. doi:10.1007/978-3-319-33745-6. ISBN 978-3-319-33743-2. LCCN 2016948201.
  6. ^ Iyer, K. S. (2013). "84. The History of Congenital Heart Surgery". In H. K. Chopra (ed.). Textbook of Cardiology: A Clinical and Historical Perspective. Navin C. Nanda. Jaypee Brothers Medical Publishers Pvt. Ltd. p. 713. ISBN 978-93-5090-081-9.
  7. ^ "Hand of God: Story of India's first successful heart transplant in a private hospital". The News Minute. 11 November 2015. Retrieved 16 September 2018.
  8. ^ Cooper, D. K. C. (1 July 1969). "Transplantation of the heart and both lungs: I. Historical review". Thorax. 24 (4): 383–390. doi:10.1136/thx.24.4.383. ISSN 0040-6376. PMC 472000. PMID 4978618.
  9. ^ a b Kalra, Aakshi; Seth, Sandeep; Hote, Milind Padmaker; Airan, Balram (1 May 2016). "The story of heart transplantation: From cape town to cape comorin". Journal of the Practice of Cardiovascular Sciences. 2 (2): 120. doi:10.4103/2395-5414.191525.
  10. ^ a b Sabharwal, Gopa (2007). India Since 1947: The Independent Years. New Delhi: Penguin Books. p. 119. ISBN 978-0-14-310274-8.
  11. ^ "Search for an Ethic" by Albert Rosenfeld, Life, 5 April 1968, p. 75. Retrieved 20 May 2018.
  12. ^ "50 Years Ago: India's First Heart Transplant in the Time of Nehruvian Science". The Wire. Retrieved 16 September 2018.
  13. ^ "22-year-old gets Mumbai's first heart transplant since 1968". Hindustantimes. 3 August 2015. Retrieved 20 May 2018.
  14. ^ a b c "Dr. P. K. Sen Memorial Oration – The Association of Surgeons of India". asiindia.org. Retrieved 19 May 2018.
  15. ^ "P K Sen Memorial Lecture - IACTS". IACTS. Retrieved 16 September 2018.

surgeon, prafulla, kumar, december, 1915, july, 1982, indian, vascular, cardiothoracic, surgeon, world, sixth, attempt, human, heart, transplant, india, first, 1968, dubbed, fourth, surgeon, world, carry, this, operation, prafulla, kumar, senborn7, december, 1. Prafulla Kumar Sen MD 7 December 1915 22 July 1982 was an Indian vascular and cardiothoracic surgeon who led the world s sixth attempt of human heart transplant and India s first in 1968 It dubbed him the fourth surgeon in the world to carry out this operation Prafulla Kumar SenBorn7 December 1915Calcutta British IndiaDied22 July 1982Calcutta IndiaNationalityIndianEducationUniversity of BombayOccupationCardiothoracic surgeonKnown forConducting the first human heart transplant in India 1968 RelativesMarie BarnesMedical careerInstitutionsKing Edward Memorial Hospital and Seth Gordhandas Sunderdas Medical CollegeSub specialtiesTransplant surgeryAwardsPadma Bhushan Sen was active in establishing postgraduate programmes in surgical training and one of the early surgeons to perform aortic surgery in India in the 1950s After being the first in India to perform a closed mitral valvotomy in 1952 within a year he repaired a coarctation of the aorta and by 1956 he had successfully attempted the first direct vision closure of an atrial septal defect In the 1950s he turned his attention from aortic surgery to open heart surgery following numerous experiments on dogs He subsequently led teams that performed two heart transplants in Bombay in 1968 Both recipients died on the day of their operation Sen was in addition a poet and painter His paintings were displayed once in the United States and twice in India Contents 1 Early life and education 2 Surgical career 2 1 Pennsylvania 2 2 Return to India 2 3 Early cardiovascular surgery 2 4 First Indian human heart transplant 2 5 1970s 2 6 Calcutta Hospital and Research Centre 3 Personal life 4 Death and legacy 5 Selected publications 6 ReferencesEarly life and education editPrafulla Kumar Sen popularly known as P K Sen 1 was born on 7 December 1915 in Calcutta British India 2 He had one sister and his father was a civil servant 3 He began his early education at a public school in Jamtada Bihar 3 before attending the Victoria College of Sciences Nagpur Subsequently Sen gained admission to medicine at the G S Medical College Bombay where he studied between 1933 and 1938 before passing his MBBS In 1940 he achieved a distinction in his master of surgery MS degree at the University of Bombay 2 Surgical career editSen s internships and surgical training were completed at King Edward VII Memorial Hospital KEM Bombay between 1938 and 1943 after which he returned to G S Medical College as assistant honorary surgeon 3 Initially he received aid from the Indian Council for Medical Research ICMR He was frequently in dispute with the Bombay Municipal Corporation who were more concerned with providing for diseases of poverty and over population However he was ambitious a buccaneer and had a wish to extend Indian medicine into the rapidly growing and exciting arena of open heart surgery 4 He was inspired by Charaka but also paid tribute to Western medical pioneers including John Hunter and Alexis Carrel 4 Pennsylvania edit In 1949 following an application for a Rockefeller Foundation fellowship and the subsequent endorsement by Isidor Schwaner Ravdin chair of surgery at the University of Pennsylvania at their request Sen travelled to the University of Pennsylvania in the United States to work for six months with thoracic surgeon James Hardy Their research on the impact of surgery on adrenocortical activity was presented at the American College of Surgeons in Boston in October 1950 and later amidst the backdrop of racial unrest in the U S and an incident in which Sen was nearly barred from a hotel at the American Physiological Society in Atlanta Before returning to India in 1952 Sen visited surgical research centres all over the United States including Minneapolis New York and Baltimore In addition he visited London and Sweden Over the next fifteen years he obtained another two travel fellowships to the U S with assistance from the Rockefeller foundation 4 Return to India edit In 1952 he was appointed to KEM Hospital as honorary surgeon but soon left to take up the post of director professor of surgery at G S Medical College the post he held until his retirement in 1973 3 He initially worked in experimental and clinical research but was later active in establishing postgraduate qualifications in cardiothoracic surgery during a period in which he also founded specialist departments at G S Medical college and the KEM Hospital including gastrointestinal and hepatic surgery sports medicine and oncology 2 Early cardiovascular surgery edit In addition to North American networks Rockefeller support and funding and the ICMR 4 Sen was also influenced by Soviet surgeons particularly Vladimir Demikhov Along with other KEM Hospital cardiothoracic surgeons including M D Kelkar G B Parulkar who established the technique of hypothermic circulatory arrest in resection of aortic aneurysm and T P Kulkarni who described tuberculous aortitis Sen was one of the first to perform aortic surgery in the 1950s laying the foundations at first for aortic surgery and than later open heart surgery in India 5 In 1952 following the adaptation of American techniques and after 25 dog experiments he successfully performed the first intra cardiac procedure in India by pushing his finger through a rheumatic mitral valve closed mitral valvotomy via a cut made in the right atrium of a beating heart 2 4 In 1953 he repaired a coarctation of the aorta and by 1956 he had successfully attempted the first direct vision closure of an atrial septal defect under hypothermia and inflow occlusion 6 Around the same time he initiated other vascular repair procedures on the Aorta for the surgical treatment of Aortitis and Aortic aneurysms 2 By 1957 Sen had completed his second travel fellowship and tour of major North American and European cardiac centres In addition on his return to India he hosted foreign delegates one of whom was William Heneage Ogilvie of Ogilvie syndrome in early 1958 4 He was at first skeptical of heart lung machines and concentrated chiefly on hypothermia in his transplant surgery but by the early 1960s he had secured Rockefeller funding to train a group of Indian surgeons and scientists in surgery using heart lung machines In 1962 following the death of a child whilst repairing a ventricular septal defect with the assistance of a heart lung machine Sen made his third and final overseas Rockefeller tour which included Japan Mexico much of the U S and the United Kingdom He concluded in Moscow with a visit to Demikhov who had recently achieved fame with his dog heart and head transplants This came at a time when the Indian government was actively cultivating ties to the Soviet Union 4 First Indian human heart transplant edit Sen and his team tested their techniques on hundreds of dogs between 1962 and 1964 4 7 In 1965 three out of five dogs who underwent cardiopulmonary transplants were able to breath after surgery without artificial ventilation All the dogs had survivals from 5 to 12 hours 8 James Hardy who had previously supervised Sen on his first fellowship at Pennsylvania in 1950 had by 1964 transplanted a chimpanzee heart into a human Two years later Hardy visited Bombay and spoke at G S Medical College about transplants 4 On 16 February 1968 Sen led the team that performed the first human heart transplant in India and only the sixth in the world 3 He was the fourth surgeon in the world to attempt this the previous three surgeons being Christiaan Barnard Norman Shumway and Adrian Kantrowitz 4 The recipient was a male farmer with severe progressive cardiomyopathy who had been admitted to hospital in the previous six months It took one month from the decision to transplant to find a donor 4 The patient was to be given the heart of a 20 year old Maharashtrian woman who had sustained severe head injuries after falling from a train The operation began just after midnight on 17 February 1968 4 The farmer died from heart failure within three hours of the operation 9 10 The operation was not publicised as widely as previous heart transplants particularly those of Barnard and Shumway 11 With less media coverage than numerous other early heart transplants Sen s heart transplant in February 1968 was before any in Europe Canada Australia Japan or the Soviet Union 12 Sen believed India had a vast potential as a transplant centre with a wealth of donor organs resulting from accidents on its disordered roads and railways 4 On 13 September 1968 he performed the second human heart transplant in India The donor was a 25 year old road traffic accident victim and the recipient a youth Severe pulmonary hypertension developed within a few hours of the operation and the recipient died within 14 hours No further attempts at heart transplants were made in India until Panangipalli Venugopal led the first successful heart transplant in India at the All India Institute of Medical Sciences AIIMS in Delhi in 1994 and after new laws had been passed relating to brain death 9 10 KEM did not carry out any further heart transplants until 2015 13 1970s edit Sen s contributions to the procedure of myocardial acupuncture in ischaemic heart disease were followed by developments in aortic arch replacement His students included Sharad Panday M S Valiathan and S I Padmavati and he maintained contact with heart surgeons outside India such as William Bigelow Denton Cooley Donald Ross Norman Shumway and Demikhov 3 14 Calcutta Hospital and Research Centre edit From 1977 Sen practiced as a consultant cardiovascular and thoracic surgeon at Calcutta Hospital and Research Centre where he remained until his death in 1982 2 Sen received the Indian Padma Bhushan award 3 4 Personal life editIn 1950 Sen met Marie Barnes an American physiologist from Philadelphia while training there They married in 1954 They had no children 3 He painted and wrote poetry His paintings were displayed at one time in the United States and twice in India 3 Death and legacy editSen died on 22 July 1982 from a heart attack 3 The department of cardiothoracic surgery at KEM was founded by him and now bears his name 14 As a past president of the Association of Surgeons of India the Dr P K Sen memorial oration was established in his honour in 1993 by the Indian Association of Cardiovascular Thoracic Surgeons 14 15 Selected publications editSEN PK Kinare SG Engineer SD Parulkar GB 1963 The middle aortic syndrome Br Heart J 25 610 8 doi 10 1136 hrt 25 5 610 PMC 1018042 PMID 14063008 Sen PK Parulkar GB Panday SR Kinare SG 1965 Homologous canine heart transplantation a preliminary report of 100 experiments Indian J Med Res 53 674 84 PMID 5318259 Sen Prufalla K 1968 Human heart homotransplantation The American Journal of Cardiology 22 826 832 doi 10 1016 0002 9149 68 90178 1 SEN PK Udwadia TE Kinare SG Parulkar GB 1965 Transmyocardial acupuncture A new approach to myocardial revascularization J Thorac Cardiovasc Surg 50 181 9 doi 10 1016 s0022 5223 19 33205 2 PMID 14321516 References edit Hosain Nazmul 1 January 1970 Dr P K Sen the Bengali Surgeon of the Century Cardiovascular Journal 3 2 a b c d e f Professor Prafulla Kumar Sen 1915 1982 Indian Journal of Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery 1 1 92 94 1 October 1982 doi 10 1007 BF02664159 ISSN 0970 9134 subscription required a b c d e f g h i j Mittal Chander Mohan 2002 Profulla Kumar Sen Texas Heart Institute Journal 29 1 17 25 ISSN 0730 2347 PMC 101263 PMID 11995843 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Jones David S Sivaramakrishnan Kavita 10 January 2018 Transplant Buccaneers P K Sen and India s First Heart Transplant February 1968 Journal of the History of Medicine and Allied Sciences 73 3 303 332 doi 10 1093 jhmas jrx059 PMID 29329407 Unnikrishan Madathipat Savlania Ajay Goura Prakash Tripathi Ramesh K 2016 Aortic Disease and Management in India In Alan Dardik ed Vascular Surgery A Global Perspective Springer p 64 doi 10 1007 978 3 319 33745 6 ISBN 978 3 319 33743 2 LCCN 2016948201 Iyer K S 2013 84 The History of Congenital Heart Surgery In H K Chopra ed Textbook of Cardiology A Clinical and Historical Perspective Navin C Nanda Jaypee Brothers Medical Publishers Pvt Ltd p 713 ISBN 978 93 5090 081 9 Hand of God Story of India s first successful heart transplant in a private hospital The News Minute 11 November 2015 Retrieved 16 September 2018 Cooper D K C 1 July 1969 Transplantation of the heart and both lungs I Historical review Thorax 24 4 383 390 doi 10 1136 thx 24 4 383 ISSN 0040 6376 PMC 472000 PMID 4978618 a b Kalra Aakshi Seth Sandeep Hote Milind Padmaker Airan Balram 1 May 2016 The story of heart transplantation From cape town to cape comorin Journal of the Practice of Cardiovascular Sciences 2 2 120 doi 10 4103 2395 5414 191525 a b Sabharwal Gopa 2007 India Since 1947 The Independent Years New Delhi Penguin Books p 119 ISBN 978 0 14 310274 8 Search for an Ethic by Albert Rosenfeld Life 5 April 1968 p 75 Retrieved 20 May 2018 50 Years Ago India s First Heart Transplant in the Time of Nehruvian Science The Wire Retrieved 16 September 2018 22 year old gets Mumbai s first heart transplant since 1968 Hindustantimes 3 August 2015 Retrieved 20 May 2018 a b c Dr P K Sen Memorial Oration The Association of Surgeons of India asiindia org Retrieved 19 May 2018 P K Sen Memorial Lecture IACTS IACTS Retrieved 16 September 2018 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title P K Sen surgeon amp oldid 1184249536, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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