Posted on 11/12/2005 10:46:42 PM PST by NormsRevenge
BERKELEY, Calif. (AP) - Hal O. Anger, a pioneer of nuclear medicine who is credited with inventing the gamma camera, has died. He was 85.
Anger died at his Berkeley home on Oct. 31. Called a "quiet genius" whose "instruments are still in common use today, diagnosing cancer, metabolic disorders and heart disease" by the Society of Nuclear Medicine, Anger developed his most noted invention in 1957, employing gamma radiation to depict metabolic processes within a living body.
Born May 24, 1920, in Denver, Anger cultivated an interest in electronics as a boy growing up in Long Beach, where he was involved with one of Southern California's first radio stations. The young scientist graduated from the University of California, Berkeley, in 1943 with a degree in electrical engineering, and worked during World War II developing technology to jam enemy radar.
After the war, Anger returned to Berkeley to work at the Ernest O. Lawrence Radiation Laboratory, where researchers were exploring the medical and therapeutic uses of radiation. He retired from the lab in 1982.
Besides holding 15 patents, Anger won many awards, including an honorary doctorate from Ohio State University, the Centennial Year Medal of the Institute for Electrical and Electronics Engineers, and the Societe Francaise de Biophysique Medal.
Anger's ashes were placed Thursday at Sunset View Cemetery in El Cerrito. A memorial service was scheduled for next Saturday in Berkeley.
1952
In Berkeley, California, Anger and his BER colleagues introduce a revolutionary new technique for radionuclide imaging. The gamma camera will become the "workhorse" of nuclear medicine for the next 50 years.
http://interactive.snm.org/index.cfm?PageID=4577&RPID=10
Society of Nuclear Medicine
Nuclear Medicine Pioneer Hal O. Anger, 1920-2005
Posted November 10, 2005
Nuclear medicine pioneer Hal O. Anger, BS, DSc, died October 31 at his home in Berkeley, CA. Recognized as a quiet genius who shaped the future of nuclear medicine, Angers contributions include instruments that allow physicians to see inside the human body in a way that is fundamentally different from x-ray technology. His gamma camera, developed in the 1950s, produces an image of the metabolic processes that take place within organs and cells, capturing the disease process in action rather than depicting the anatomical changes that accompany a disease. Angers inventions brought the diagnostic techniques made possible by the tracer principle into widespread use, and his instruments are still in common use today, diagnosing cancer, metabolic disorders, and heart disease.
Anger was born May 24, 1920, in Denver, CO, and grew up in Long Beach, CA. The period between the two world wars saw a number of advances in electronics. Angers family was involved with one of the first radio stations in Southern California. This stimulated in him an interest in electronics, which offered him the chance to build and test cutting-edge technologies with his own hands. While still in junior college he built one of the first television receivers in Long Beach using components from his college physics lab. He graduated from the University of California at Berkeley (UCB) in 1943 with a degree in electrical engineering and spent the rest of World War II working on radar-jamming technology.
After the war, Anger returned to Berkeley and found a home at the Donner Laboratory, in the Lawrence Radiation Laboratory (Ernest O. Lawrences Rad Lab). The Donner Laboratory was started as a facility for exploring the medical and therapeutic use of radiation. Anger stayed at Donner from 1946 until his retirement in 1982. His early work was with John Lawrence, MD, and Cornelius Tobias, PhD, co-founders of Donner, who were attempting to develop the 184-inch cyclotron beam for use in radiation therapy. In the early 1950s, Anger launched his own work on an instrument that would allow physicians to observe human organs in action. The gamma camera, also known as a scintillation or Anger camera, was first demonstrated at the Society of Nuclear Medicine (SNM) annual meeting in 1958. A number of gamma cameras by multiple manufacturers were on display at the societys 2005 annual meeting.
Angers hands-on approach to science also led to his invention of the well counter, used daily in nuclear medical labs around the world; the first whole-body scanner; the first positron camera; and the multiplane tomographic scanner.
Service Planned
Hal Angers ashes were placed at Sunset View Cemetery in El Cerrito, CA, on November 10. A monument at the site reads: Hal O. Anger, Nuclear Medicine Pioneer, Inventor of the Gamma Camera, 19202005. A memorial gathering for family, friends, and colleagues is planned for Saturday, November 19, at the Hotel Durant in Berkeley.
Anger held 15 U.S. patents and wrote numerous journal articles and book chapters. He was the recipient of many major awards and honors, including the John Scott Award in 1964 for the development of the positron camera; a Guggenheim Fellowship, 1966; Gesellschaft fur Medizin, 1971; honorary doctorate in science, Ohio State University, 1972; Nuclear Medicine Pioneer Citation, SNM, 1974; Modern Medicine Award for Distinguished Achievement, 1975; SNM First Western Regional award for distinguished contributions to nuclear medicine, 1976; Centennial Year Medal, Institute for Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE), 1984; Societé Française de Biophysique Medal, 1988; Georg de Hevesy Memorial Medal, Vienna, 1991; and Honorary Member and Fellow, American College of Nuclear Physicians, 1992.
In 1994, the SNM awarded Anger the first Cassen Prize, a $25,000 award given to a living scientist whose work has made a major advance in nuclear medicine science.
Anger is survived by his brother, Clifford D. Anger, PhD, of Canmore, Alberta, Canada.
Don't make him Anger. You wouldn't like him when he's Anger.
Durn gamma cameras...
Thank God for this man.
Tomographic scanner
Positron scanner
Whole-body scanner
A pretty impressive set of accomplishments..
No Nobel prizes tho. Odd.
Nuclear Medicine Ping!
Made my living as a tech for many years...:)
RIP Mr. Anger...and thank you.
He should have trashed the U.S.A.. That would have won the prize.
That's the one which determined that my lung lesion is not cancerous. Whew!
the effects of gamma radiation on the human body after getting apic taken with angers camera :-)
Dr. Anger, don't make me angry. You wouldn't like me when I'm angry.
Whew. I thought, from the title, that Ed Anger from the Weekly World News died.
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