
Alfred Blalock (1899-1964) circa 1944
'Alfred Blalock' (
April 5,
1899 –
September 15,
1964) was a 20th century
American innovator in the field of
medical science most noted for his research on the
medical condition of
shock and the development of the
Blalock-Taussig Shunt, surgical relief of the cyanosis from
Tetralogy of Fallot--known commonly as the
blue baby syndrome--with his assistant
Vivien Thomas and
pediatric cardiologist Helen Taussig.
Birth and early career
Born in
Culloden, Georgia, Blalock entered
Georgia Military Academy, a preparatory school for the
University of Georgia, at the age of 14. Having graduated from the University of Georgia with an
A.B. in 1918 at the age of 19, Blalock subsequently entered
Johns Hopkins Medical School, where he roomed with, became tennis doubles partner to, and began a lifetime friendship with
Tinsley Harrison. Blalock earned his medical degree at Johns Hopkins in 1922. Hoping to gain appointment to a surgical residency at Johns Hopkins due to his admiration of
William S. Halsted, Blalock remained in
Baltimore over the next three years, completing an internship in
urology, one year of an assistant residency on the general surgical service (his contract was not renewed), and an externship in
ENT. He moved to
Boston, Massachusetts in the summer of 1925 to begin a surgical residency at the
Peter Bent Brigham Hospital, but left for Vanderbilt "without ever unpacking [his] trunk."
Vanderbilt University
In July 1925, Blalock joined his good friend Harrison at
Vanderbilt University in
Nashville to serve as first chief resident in surgery under
Barney Brooks, who was
Vanderbilt University Hospital's first Professor of Surgery and Chief of the Surgical Service. Blalock was active in teaching third and fourth year medical students, and as a result was placed in charge of the surgical research laboratory. While at Vanderbilt University he worked on the nature and treatment of hemorrhagic and traumatic shock. Experimenting on dogs, he found that surgical shock resulted from the loss of blood, and he encouraged the use of
blood plasma or whole blood products as treatment following the onset of shock. This research resulted in the saving of many lives during
World War II. Unfortunately, Blalock met with frequent bouts of
tuberculosis during his Vanderbilt years. His first paper on shock, published in 1927, was actually written by his friend Harrison based on the data that Blalock had completed but could not compile due to his illness.
While at Vanderbilt in 1938, Blalock attempted to produce
pulmonary hypertension in experiments joining the left
subclavian artery to the left
pulmonary artery. Although these experiments failed in their purpose, he returned to this idea years later.
Johns Hopkins
When Blalock was offered Chief of Surgery at
Johns Hopkins Hospital in 1941, he requested that his assistant,
Vivien Thomas, come along with him. They formed a very close relationship that would last more than 30 years. Together they developed a shunt technique to bypass
aortic coarctation. While they were working on this,
Helen Taussig presented him with the problem of the blue baby syndrome.
Blue baby

diagram showing the normal blood circulation (above) and the blood circulation on a heart suffering from ToF
In the normal
heart, there are four separate chambers; the two top chambers are known as atria and pump blood simultaneously into the two bottom chambers, or
ventricles. Blood first enters the heart at the right atrium, which then empties blood into the right ventricle, which
pumps the blood into the lungs through the pulmonary artery to get oxygen. From the lungs, the blood enters the left atrium through the pulmonary vein; the left atrium empties into the left ventricle, which pumps the blood into the aorta and from there reaches the rest of the body. Because it is responsible for getting blood to the entire body through the aorta, the left ventricle is usually the biggest and strongest chamber of the heart.
The following is a depiction of normal blood flow through the body. Valves keep the blood from flowing backwards. Capital letters indicate blood that has been oxygenated:
veins → superior or inferior vena cava → right atrium ——''
tricuspid valve''→ right ventricle
——''
pulmonary valve''→ pulmonary artery → LUNGS → PULMONARY VEIN →
LEFT ATRIUM ——''
mitral valve''→ LEFT VENTRICLE ——''
aortic valve''→ AORTA → ARTERIES
After the body uses up the oxygen delivered by the blood flowing through the
arteries, then
arterioles, then
capillaries, the unoxygenated blood returns to the heart by the capillaries, then
venules, then
veins.
The blue baby syndrome, known as
Tetralogy of Fallot (TOF), consists of an incomplete wall between the ventricles (known as a
ventricular septal defect or VSD), an aorta that sits over this defect so that its blood comes from both ventricles instead of just from the left (
overriding aorta), a defective right ventricular outflow tract near the
pulmonary valve that prevents full flow of blood to the lungs, and a muscular right ventricle necessary to accomplish the extra work required to overcome that defect (
right ventricular hypertrophy).
The following is a depiction of blood flow in Tetralogy of Fallot. Mixed capital letters indicate partially oxygenated blood.
veins → superior or inferior vena cava → right atrium ——''tricuspid valve''→
rIgHt vEnTrIcLe ——''VSD''→ LeFt VeNtRiClE or
__
——''pulmonary valve''→ pulmonary artery → LUNGS → PULMONARY VEIN →
LEFT ATRIUM ——''mitral valve''→
LeFt VeNtRiClE <—————————————————————————————————————————rIgHt vEnTrIcLe
__
——''aortic valve''→ aOrTa → aRtErIeS
Unoxygenated blood from the right ventricle flows into the aorta preferentially because of the obstructed outflow tract into the lungs. This means less blood has the opportunity to be oxygenated in the lungs. Blood mixes abnormally between the left and right ventricles and into the aorta. Oxygen gives blood its reddish color.
Cyanosis describes the "blueness" in the baby and results from the pumping of mixed oxygenated and unoxygenated blood throughout the body.
Blalock developed the idea for the operation from his aforementioned failed experiments on dogs. The shunt joins the left subclavian artery (normally oxygenated but partially oxygenated in TOF) to the left pulmonary artery (normally unoxygenated but with very little blood flow in TOF). This increases the amount of blood that goes into the lungs and is returned to the left side of the heart. As a result, more oxygenated blood is pumped to the rest of the body. Vivien Thomas perfected the surgical technique in the laboratory and instructed Blalock during the procedure. The first Blalock-Taussig shunt operation was performed on
November 29,
1944 on
Eileen Saxon and instantly restored her to a healthy "pink" color. Even though this surgery only prolonged Eileen's life for two months, it was pioneering pediatric heart surgery.
Film
In the
2004 HBO docudrama '' about the Blalock-Thomas collaboration, Blalock was portrayed by
Alan Rickman and Thomas by
Mos Def.
External links
★ http://www.medicalarchives.jhmi.edu/blbio.htm
★ http://www.medicalarchives.jhmi.edu/sgml/blalock.html
★ http://www.mc.vanderbilt.edu/biolib/hc/biopages/ablalock.html
References
★ Thomas, Vivien T., ''Partners of the Heart: Vivien Thomas and His Work With Alfred Blalock'',(originally published as ''Pioneering Research in Surgical Shock and Cardiovascular Surgery: Vivien Thomas and His Work with Alfred Blalock''), University of Pennsylvania Press, 1985. ISBN 0-8122-1634-2.
★ McCabe, Katie, "Like Something the Lord Made" ''
Washingtonian'' magazine, August 1989. Reprinted in ''Feature Writing for Newspapers and Magazines: the Pursuit of Excellence'', ed. by Jay Friedlander and John Lee. May also be accessed by going to the web site for the HBO film
Something the Lord Made, www.hbo.com/films/stlm.
★ Merrill WH, "What's Past is Prologue" Ann Thorac Surg 1999;68:2366-75