Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Biography Of Renowned Surgeon Fulfills Destiny

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Biography Of Renowned Surgeon Fulfills Destiny

    BIOGRAPHY OF RENOWNED SURGEON FULFILLS DESTINY
    By Pamela H. Sacks Telegram & Gazette Staff

    Worcester Telegram, MA
    May 29 2007

    Doctor aided soldiers disfigured during World War I

    Dr. Hagop Martin Deranian says he was destined to write a biography
    of the man who pioneered the specialty of plastic and reconstructive
    surgery.

    Certainly the fact that Dr. Varaztad H. Kazanjian was a fellow Armenian
    created a bond between the two men. And having Worcester in common
    could only have strengthened the ties. After escaping oppression
    in Ottoman Armenia, Dr. Kazanjian, who was 16 at the time, came to
    Worcester and worked in the wire mills. Dr. Deranian is a Worcester
    native.

    But there's little question that, as a dentist, Dr. Deranian has a
    special appreciation for Dr. Kazanjian's extraordinary, far-reaching
    accomplishments.

    Dr. Kazanjian became a dentist and then gained widespread renown
    for his innovative methods of repairing severe facial wounds on the
    battlefields of northern France during World War I. He then returned
    home and earned a degree from Harvard Medical School. He went on to
    become a world-famous plastic surgeon.

    In 1931, Dr. Kazanjian was called to Vienna to make an appliance for
    Sigmund Freud, who had lost a large section of his jaw to cancer. The
    hand-made appliance was so much lighter and more comfortable than
    previous models that Freud was prompted to call Dr. Kazanjian
    "a magician."

    Dr. Deranian started working on his biography of Dr. Kazanjian 30 years
    ago. Last month, "Miracle Man of the Western Front" was published
    by Chandler House Press of Worcester. The book is filled with rare
    old photographs, as well as illustrations of medical procedures. It
    is a profile that combines the personal and professional lives of
    the kindly and unassuming surgeon, who, in Dr. Deranian's view,
    experienced the ultimate fulfillment of the American dream.

    "It's a passion I just had to do in life," Dr. Deranian, 84, said of
    his book. "It's like a fulfillment of my life."

    During a recent interview in his dental office on Main Street,
    Dr. Deranian proudly handed over a framed photograph of himself with
    Dr. Kazanjian. The picture was shot 40 years ago at the centennial
    of the American Academy of Dental Science, and both men are clad
    in tuxedoes.

    The two had first met years earlier. Dr. Deranian, a graduate of Clark
    University, was in his final year at the University of Pennsylvania
    School of Dental Medicine. Dr. Kazanjian was in Philadelphia lecturing
    on oral surgery to graduate students. Dr. Deranian enthusiastically
    introduced himself, having, as a child, heard stories about
    Dr. Kazanjian's years in Worcester.

    "Meeting him was almost anticlimactic," Dr. Deranian remembered. "He
    was a hero to the immigrant."

    Later, Dr. Deranian practiced dentistry in Boston, just a few doors
    down from Dr. Kazanjian. Dr. Deranian had an interest in complex
    dental repairs using custom appliances. On several occasions, he
    scrubbed in with Dr. Kazanjian on cleft-palate surgeries.

    After serving in the Navy, Dr. Deranian returned to Worcester
    and set up his practice. He would see Dr. Kazanjian from time to
    time. "He was very interested in keeping abreast of Worcester news,"
    Dr. Deranian said.

    Even as a young man, Dr. Deranian had it in mind to write a book on
    Dr. Kazanjian. After Dr. Kazanjian's death in 1974, his widow wrote
    to Dr. Deranian, saying, "Dr. Kazanjian always felt very close to
    you and spoke of you often."

    Dr. Deranian dug in. To tell the story of Dr. Kazanjian's early life,
    Dr. Deranian read correspondence and articles in Armenian and searched
    for pictures of the town where he grew up. He tracked down people who
    knew Dr. Kazanjian in different phases of his life and spent hour upon
    hour poring over a wide range of material, including the classic text
    "The Surgical Treatment of Facial Injuries," written by Dr. Kazanjian
    and Dr. John M. Converse.

    Dr. Kazanjian's World War I experiences, starting in 1915, are
    particularly fascinating. As a member of a unit sent by Harvard to
    help the British medical team, Dr. Kazanjian began by treating British
    soldiers for a host of dental problems. The British were astounded at
    the American "dentist-doctors," whose treatments cleared up a range
    of related health issues.

    As the war progressed, increasing numbers of soldiers were engaged
    in trench warfare and suffering from horrendous facial wounds. The
    injuries often were so disfiguring and the methods of repair were
    so elementary that some victims wore tin masks for the rest of
    their lives.

    Dr. Kazanjian was eager to help; he was ambidextrous and worked very
    fast. His techniques were brilliantly creative. His three-month stay
    was extended to three years.

    Dr. Deranian quotes from a letter that Dr. Ferdinand Brigham, an
    American dentist serving with Dr. Kazanjian, wrote to his father:

    "We naturally call our cases 'fractured jaws' but ... there usually
    goes with this condition a mutilation of the face, nose, head, throat,
    etc. which can easily result in a bad deformity for life." A high
    ranking British medical officer "was very insistent that we remain,"
    realizing "that if Dr. Kazanjian will stay, countless men can be
    saved from mutilation and even death."

    The British expressed their gratitude to Dr. Kazanjian by bestowing
    on him in 1919 the highest honor given a foreigner, investiture into
    the Order of St. Michael and St. George.

    Yet, as an immigrant, Dr. Kazanjian had to prove himself over
    and over. Dr. Deranian noted that even after returning to the
    U.S. following World War I, Harvard Medical School did him no
    favors. Dr. Kazanjian had to follow the same curriculum as students
    20 years his junior.

    "I wanted to make sure it would be a realistic biography, but there
    also had to be an appreciation of his clinical accomplishments,"
    Dr. Deranian said.

    What set Dr. Kazanjian apart was his ability to perform surgery
    and make innovative oral appliances. "He rose and crossed borders,"
    Dr. Deranian said. "It's that link between two specialties."

    Dr. Deranian spent seven years writing "Miracle Man of the Western
    Front" and then turned the manuscript over to Worcester lawyer Edward
    Simsarian for editing. Dr. Robert M. Goldwyn checked the text for
    medical accuracy, and Nobel laureate Dr. Joseph E. Murray wrote the
    foreword. Dr. Deranian had the book and its jacket designed and then
    approached Lawrence Abramoff, who owns Chandler House Press.

    The book costs $39.95. The Worcester District Medical Society has
    provided a grant for distribution of copies to Central Massachusetts
    libraries.

    As Dr. Deranian held a copy of his book, he smiled and said, "I wanted
    it to be first quality. The man and the occasion deserved it.

    I keep thinking of the word 'dignity.' He gave the profession dignity,
    and he represented the American dream."

    http://www.telegram.com/apps/pbcs.dl l/article?AID=/20070529/COLUMN46/705290341/1102
Working...
X