讣告:Ed Lammer博士

Richard H. Finnell Ph.D., Gary M. Shaw Dr.Ph.
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Ed received additional postdoctoral training at Stanford Medical School prior to establishing a brilliant career at the California Birth Defects Monitoring Program and the Children's Hospital Oakland Research Institute (now known as Benioff Children's Hospital Research Institute of the University of California, San Francisco) from which he retired in January, 2016.</p><p>As a pediatric geneticist and teratologist, Ed was an expert at diagnosing children with complex malformations. His keen understanding of genetics, epidemiology and teratology enabled him to make seminal contributions to the scientific literature, most notably about the risks involved to women of reproductive age being treated for cystic acne with the drug Accutane (Hoffmann-La Roche). His 1985 landmark paper in the <i>New England Journal of Medicine</i> describe his evaluation of 150 Accutane compromised pregnancies and described the most serious human teratogen since Thalidomide in the 1960s. He continued to publish on risks associated with <i>in utero</i> exposure to Accutane to fully articulate the clinical manifestations of the Accutane Embryopathy, and provided a unique insight into the underlying mechanisms of how this compound interfered with normal neural crest cell migration resulting in abnormal development. Ed also provided similar clinical and scientific insights into the teratogenicity of the anti-epileptic drug Depakene (Valproic Acid; Abbott Laboratories). Leaving behind a publication record of over 165 papers and many more to follow posthumously, Ed Lammer truly embodied the spirit of the Teratology Society's F. 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His mentoring of so many young minds will serve as an enduring testament of his patience and brilliance.</p><p>At conferences he would listen attentively. Invariably he would ask those deceptively simple questions that cut right to the meaning of the work being presented. These questions would quickly illuminate any shortcuts or defects of logic and reveal that in the space of 15 minutes of listening to a presentation, Ed had already thought more deeply about the subject than the presenter had, yet his manner of inquiry was never threatening, offensive or belittling. Ed was kind to a fault. Which is why scientists and clinicians young and old always gravitated towards Ed at meetings, hoping for a chance to get his take on whatever they were working on, without fear of any kind of scientific shaming. Ed set the bar very high for his colleagues and his friends. We all cherished the challenge and wish he were still here to keep challenging us.</p><p>What sets Ed Lammer aside from most of his scientific and clinical colleagues was the balance he was able to achieve in life. Ed was a passionate man who had developed and enthusiastically embraced multiple interests and hobbies that shaped his non-professional life. First and foremost came his family. Ed was lovingly devoted to his wife Dibsy, and their two children, Aaron and Ellie, in whose achievements he delighted. Ed was passionate about music, and although his tastes were wide ranging, he held a special fondness for Jerry Garcia and the Grateful Dead. He loved the outdoors. Whether it was hiking, mountaineering, bird watching, or fly-fishing, he truly enjoyed sharing this hobby with his many friends and colleagues. 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His mentoring of so many young minds will serve as an enduring testament of his patience and brilliance.</p><p>At conferences he would listen attentively. Invariably he would ask those deceptively simple questions that cut right to the meaning of the work being presented. These questions would quickly illuminate any shortcuts or defects of logic and reveal that in the space of 15 minutes of listening to a presentation, Ed had already thought more deeply about the subject than the presenter had, yet his manner of inquiry was never threatening, offensive or belittling. Ed was kind to a fault. Which is why scientists and clinicians young and old always gravitated towards Ed at meetings, hoping for a chance to get his take on whatever they were working on, without fear of any kind of scientific shaming. Ed set the bar very high for his colleagues and his friends. 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引用次数: 0

摘要

埃德是爱荷华州一名教师和送奶工的儿子,他是一名有天赋的运动员,在圣路易斯的华盛顿大学接受本科教育,在爱荷华大学接受医学训练。在爱荷华市担任儿科住院医师之后,Lammer博士在乔治亚州亚特兰大的疾病控制中心担任流行病情报服务官员,之后在马萨诸塞州波士顿的麻省总医院与Lewis B. Holmes博士一起攻读医学遗传学奖学金。在加州出生缺陷监测计划和儿童医院奥克兰研究所(现称为加州大学旧金山分校贝尼奥夫儿童医院研究所)建立辉煌的职业生涯之前,Ed在斯坦福医学院接受了额外的博士后培训,他于2016年1月退休。作为一名儿科遗传学家和畸形学家,Ed是诊断儿童复杂畸形的专家。他对遗传学、流行病学和致畸学的敏锐理解使他对科学文献做出了开创性的贡献,其中最引人注目的是对育龄妇女使用药物Accutane治疗囊性痤疮的风险。1985年,他在《新英格兰医学杂志》上发表了一篇具有里程碑意义的论文,描述了他对150例阿曲坦孕妇的评估,并描述了自20世纪60年代沙利度胺以来最严重的人类致畸物。他继续发表与子宫内暴露于Accutane相关的风险,以充分阐明Accutane胚胎病的临床表现,并提供了该化合物如何干扰正常神经嵴细胞迁移导致异常发育的潜在机制的独特见解。Ed也提供了类似的临床和科学见解的致畸性的抗癫痫药物Depakene(丙戊酸;雅培公司)。留下了超过165篇论文的出版记录,并留下了更多的论文,埃德·拉默真正体现了畸形学会为有天赋的年轻研究者设立的f·克拉克·弗雷泽奖的精神,作为该奖项的第一个获得者,也是最喜欢这一荣誉的同名个人。近年来,作为多个国家卫生研究院拨款的首席研究员,Ed指导了一个研究项目,专注于影响心脏和颅面发育的基因-环境相互作用。他与斯坦福大学医学院(Stanford University School of Medicine)、加州大学伯克利分校(UC-Berkeley)、加州大学旧金山分校(UCSF)和德克萨斯大学(University of Texas)的同事广泛合作,这些人都很欣赏他无可挑剔的学术诚实和严格的高标准,以及他不同寻常的慷慨。埃德在21世纪没有手机的情况下也活得很好。只使用他信任的“灵魂飞行员”(胸前口袋里的索引卡)来监控他的时间和行踪,Ed总能抽出时间来聊天,讨论一个案子,听取一个资助的想法,或者为一篇初稿提供有价值的意见。Ed在教学和指导学生方面非常有耐心。他对这么多年轻人的指导将永远证明他的耐心和才华。开会时,他会聚精会神地听。他总是会问一些看似简单的问题,这些问题直接切入了所展示作品的意义。这些问题会迅速揭示出任何逻辑上的捷径或缺陷,并揭示出在15分钟的聆听时间里,Ed已经比演讲者对这个主题有了更深入的思考,但他的提问方式从来没有威胁、冒犯或轻视。艾德太好了。这就是为什么科学家和临床医生在会议上总是被埃德吸引,希望有机会得到他对他们正在研究的任何东西的看法,而不用担心任何科学上的羞辱。埃德为他的同事和朋友设定了很高的标准。我们都珍惜这次挑战,希望他还在这里继续挑战我们。让Ed Lammer与他的大多数科学和临床同事不同的是,他能够在生活中实现平衡。埃德是一个充满激情的人,他培养并热情地接受了多种兴趣和爱好,这些兴趣和爱好塑造了他的非职业生活。首先是他的家庭。埃德深爱着他的妻子迪布西和他们的两个孩子,亚伦和埃莉,他为他们的成就感到高兴。埃德对音乐充满热情,虽然他的品味很广泛,但他特别喜欢杰里·加西亚和感恩而死乐队。他喜欢户外活动。无论是徒步旅行、登山、观鸟还是飞钓,他都很喜欢和他的朋友和同事们分享这个爱好。埃德也喜欢和朋友们分享好酒,随着时间的推移,他在伯克利的酒窖里积累了令人羡慕的藏品。 他对自己的领域有着渊博的知识、诚实的知识、批判性的思维、无限的慷慨、对孩子和他们的家庭充满同情心的承诺、美酒和音乐。一个杰出的儿科遗传学家/畸形学家,一个完美的家庭男人,一个非凡的导师,一个温柔的巨人,他真正改变了孩子们的生活。当我们想起我们深爱的朋友埃德·拉默时,我们会这样想。
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Obituary: Dr. Ed Lammer

The son of an Iowa schoolteacher and milkman, Ed was a gifted athlete who received his undergraduate education at Washington University in Saint Louis and his medical training at the University of Iowa. Following his pediatric residency in Iowa City, Dr. Lammer was an Epidemic Intelligence Service Officer at the Centers for Disease Control in Atlanta, GA prior to pursuing a medical genetics fellowship with Dr. Lewis B. Holmes at the Mass-General in Boston, MA. Ed received additional postdoctoral training at Stanford Medical School prior to establishing a brilliant career at the California Birth Defects Monitoring Program and the Children's Hospital Oakland Research Institute (now known as Benioff Children's Hospital Research Institute of the University of California, San Francisco) from which he retired in January, 2016.

As a pediatric geneticist and teratologist, Ed was an expert at diagnosing children with complex malformations. His keen understanding of genetics, epidemiology and teratology enabled him to make seminal contributions to the scientific literature, most notably about the risks involved to women of reproductive age being treated for cystic acne with the drug Accutane (Hoffmann-La Roche). His 1985 landmark paper in the New England Journal of Medicine describe his evaluation of 150 Accutane compromised pregnancies and described the most serious human teratogen since Thalidomide in the 1960s. He continued to publish on risks associated with in utero exposure to Accutane to fully articulate the clinical manifestations of the Accutane Embryopathy, and provided a unique insight into the underlying mechanisms of how this compound interfered with normal neural crest cell migration resulting in abnormal development. Ed also provided similar clinical and scientific insights into the teratogenicity of the anti-epileptic drug Depakene (Valproic Acid; Abbott Laboratories). Leaving behind a publication record of over 165 papers and many more to follow posthumously, Ed Lammer truly embodied the spirit of the Teratology Society's F. Clarke Fraser award for gifted young investigators, as the first recipient of the award and the individual most like the namesake of this honor.

In recent years, as the Principal Investigator of multiple National Institutes of Health grants, Ed directed a research program focused on gene-environment interactions that compromised heart and craniofacial development. He collaborated widely with colleagues at Stanford University School of Medicine, UC-Berkeley, UCSF, and the University of Texas, who valued his impeccable intellectual honesty and his rigorous high standards, as much as his unusual generosity. Ed was someone who lived well into the 21st century without a cell phone. Using only his trusted ‘soul pilot’ (index card in chest pocket) to monitor his time and whereabouts, Ed could always make time to chat, discuss a case, hear out an idea for a grant or provide valued input to a nascent manuscript. Ed was tremendously patient with teaching and mentoring students. His mentoring of so many young minds will serve as an enduring testament of his patience and brilliance.

At conferences he would listen attentively. Invariably he would ask those deceptively simple questions that cut right to the meaning of the work being presented. These questions would quickly illuminate any shortcuts or defects of logic and reveal that in the space of 15 minutes of listening to a presentation, Ed had already thought more deeply about the subject than the presenter had, yet his manner of inquiry was never threatening, offensive or belittling. Ed was kind to a fault. Which is why scientists and clinicians young and old always gravitated towards Ed at meetings, hoping for a chance to get his take on whatever they were working on, without fear of any kind of scientific shaming. Ed set the bar very high for his colleagues and his friends. We all cherished the challenge and wish he were still here to keep challenging us.

What sets Ed Lammer aside from most of his scientific and clinical colleagues was the balance he was able to achieve in life. Ed was a passionate man who had developed and enthusiastically embraced multiple interests and hobbies that shaped his non-professional life. First and foremost came his family. Ed was lovingly devoted to his wife Dibsy, and their two children, Aaron and Ellie, in whose achievements he delighted. Ed was passionate about music, and although his tastes were wide ranging, he held a special fondness for Jerry Garcia and the Grateful Dead. He loved the outdoors. Whether it was hiking, mountaineering, bird watching, or fly-fishing, he truly enjoyed sharing this hobby with his many friends and colleagues. Ed also appreciated to sharing a great wine with friends, and over time amassed an enviable collection in his Berkeley cellar.

An encyclopedic knowledge of his field, intellectual honesty, critical thinking, limitless generosity, compassionate commitment to children and their families, good wine and music. A brilliant pediatric geneticist/teratologist, a wonderful family man, an extraordinary mentor, and a gentle giant who made a real difference to children's lives. This is what we think about when we remember our beloved friend Ed Lammer.

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Birth defects research. Part A, Clinical and molecular teratology
Birth defects research. Part A, Clinical and molecular teratology 医药科学, 胎儿发育与产前诊断, 生殖系统/围生医学/新生儿
CiteScore
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期刊最新文献
Issue Information Cover Image Corrigendum for: Levels of folate receptor autoantibodies in maternal and cord blood and risk of neural tube defects in a Chinese population, 106:685–695 (10.1002/bdra.23517) Acardiac twin pregnancies part III: Model simulations. Diprosopus: Systematic review and report of two cases.
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