H.M. was a young man when he underwent an experimental surgery to try and fix a seizure disorder in 1953. They fixed the seizure disorder, but he had anterograde amnesia; oversimplifying it, he couldn't remember after the surgery. He agreed to participated in neurological research and did so for 55 years. Anyone who has taken a course in neuroscience (and probably neuropsychology) knows who H.M. is. In Neuroscience last semester, we talked about H.M. in several different lectures about differing yet related topics. He was involved in so much research that I'm sure that there are entire books written on H.M. If I didn't have exams coming up, I'd explain more about him and what we have learned. Let's put it this way, H.M. is so significant that his brain is being perserved--like Albert Einstein. There are two interesting articles about H.M: the New York Times talked about his life and Slate talked about amnesia in general.
As a medical student and former clinical researcher, I express how much I appreciate everyone who has so shown such altruism as to allow themselves to participate in research, like H.M. There are not enough words to thank the selflessness of those who donate their bodies so students can learn in the cadaver lab or so someone else life can be saved with a transplant surgery. So with much gratitude, thank you H.M. and may you rest in peace. Your contributions to neuroscience and medicine are so vast, so remarkable and unforgettable.
"Never regard study as a duty, but as the enviable opportunity to learn." --Albert Einstein
Nicole, MD
I'm no longer an expatriate. I started my 3rd year of medical school in Miami and have finished my first set of medical boards, which I passed! I've been to the little island of Dominica and Miami. I completed my Family Medicine, OB/GYN and Internal Medicine clerkships while living in the beautiful city of Miami Beach, FL. I moved to New York City in the beginning of August 2011, passed my second set of boards and finished rotations in Astoria, Queens in December 2011. I have not been posting as much as I have been extremely busy. It is hard to believe that I finished medical school, landed a pediatrics residency and that I'm finally Nicole, M.D.
Friday, December 5, 2008
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