|
Inventor of the Week Archive
Browse
for a different Invention or Inventor
Inventor of Implantable Pacemaker Honored for Lifetime Achievement
Wilson Greatbatch Recognized by Lemelson-MIT Awards Program
NEW YORK, NY -- April 11, 1996 -- Independent inventor and entrepreneur Wilson Greatbatch of Clarence, NY, has been named the 1996 recipient of the Lifetime Achievement Award by the Lemelson-MIT Prize Program, administered by the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Greatbatch is the inventor of the implantable cardiac pacemaker -- the first major internal biomedical device in history -- and holds 150 patents, founding nine companies in the process.
The announcement was made today at the New York Academy of Sciences in New York City by Dr. Lester C. Thurow, internationally renowned economist of MIT's Sloan School of Management and chairman of the Lemelson-MIT Prize Board, which oversees the selection process. Greatbatch will be honored at a ceremony this evening at the Smithsonian's National Museum of American History (Washington, DC) for his contributions to American invention and innovation.
Independent inventor Jerome H. Lemelson and his wife, Dorothy, established the Lemelson-MIT Prize Program at MIT in 1994 to recognize the nation's most talented inventors in order to promote positive role models for American youngsters. The program's Lifetime Achievement Award honors individuals for career-long accomplishments and ingenuity.
"Wilson Greatbatch's life illustrates the strength of the commitment, drive and curiosity that drives inventors," said Charles M. Vest, president of MIT. "He is an important example for aspiring innovators everywhere."
Thurow calls Greatbatch "an inspiring role model for independent inventors everywhere in terms of the length and breadth of his inventiveness and his adamant insistence that his work would pay for itself."
Commenting on his Award, Greatbatch said, "Just immerse yourself in the problem and work hard. The true reward is not in the results but in the doing."
Greatbatch's interest in science and invention expressed itself as a
teenager, when he built his own short-wave radio from scratch. But it
was after his Naval service (serving as a rear gunner in carrier-based
dive bombers), while working at Cornell University's Animal Behavior
Farm, that he began inventing in earnest. Brown bag lunch sessions
with two neurosurgeons in 1951 taught Greatbatch that potentially
deadly periodic heartbeat stoppages could be stopped only by
television-set sized devices that had to be plugged into an outlet and
delivered a painful shock to skin electrodes on the chest. It was
in the late 1950s, with the introduction of transistors, that
Greatbatch made the mistake that eventually created the pacemaker.
While building an oscillator with one transistor to aid recording of
fast heart sounds, Greatbatch grabbed the wrong resistor. The circuit
pulsed, then stopped, then pulsed again -- exactly the rhythm of the
human heart. With the encouragement and help of William C. Chardack,
chief of surgery at Buffalo's Veteran's Administration Hospital,
Greatbatch created and tested a number of designs, eventually taking
two years to create, by hand, his first 50 pacemakers, working in an
old cedar-sided barn in the back of his house, heated by a woodburning
stove. With a licensing agreement with Medtronic, Inc., and
Chardack's pioneering work educating the medical profession in this
new discovery, pacemakers soon became a recognized force in modern
medicine. Since the first pacemaker was implanted in 1960, some three
million lives have been saved, and Medtronics, Inc. continues as the
world's top producer of therapeutic implantable devices, with sales of
$1.4 billion in 1994. Pacemakers accounted for 67 percent of sales.
In the 1970s, Greatbatch searched for a longer-lasting pacemaker
battery that would not be affected by the corrosive salts in the human
body. He adapted a lithium iodine power source for the demands of the
pacemaker. The power source led to the founding of Wilson GreatbatchLtd. in Clarence, New York. With $30 million in sales, Wilson
Greatbatch Ltd. still sells or licenses more than 90 percent of the
world's pacemaker batteries. In the 1980s, Greatbatch focused his
inventive creativity to ecological and environmental projects: he
modified his pick-up truck to run on alcohol, and developed "Voyager,"
a solar-powered canoe in which he cruised 120 miles on the Finger
Lakes for his 72nd birthday. "That was an exhilarating experience,"
he recalls. Today, at age 76, Greatbatch remains as inquisitive
as he was in his early teens, when he built his first short-wave
radio.
For his work of the past decade, he and a colleague, John
Sanford of Cornell University, were awarded a patent for their work in
stopping the reproduction of a virus similar to HIV in cats.
Greatbatch is now president and CEO of Greatbatch Gen-Aid Ltd. whichis continuing ten years of AIDS research using anti-sense
hybridization interference to try to block replication of the AIDS
virus. "There are few more outstanding examples of a lifetime
dedicated to innovation than Wilson Greatbatch," said Lemelson.
The Lifetime Achievement Award is part of the Lemelson-MIT Prize
Program, which also bestows the Lemelson-MIT
Prize, an annual, $500,000 award -- the world's largest single
prize for invention and innovation -- to a United States citizen or
permanent resident (or qualified team of two) who demonstrates
excellence in creativity invention and/or innovation in medicine hand
health care; energy and environment; telecommunication and computing;
consumer products, durable goods and industrial products. Last year's
Lifetime Achievement Award co-recipients were William Hewlett and
David Packard, founders of Hewlett-Packard Corp. In May, the
Lemelson-MIT Prize Program will announce the winner of the 1996
Lemelson-MIT
Student Prize.
|