Archibald McIndoe

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Sir Archibald Hector McIndoe CBE FRCS (4 May 1900 – 11 April 1960) was a New Zealand plastic surgeon who worked for the Royal Air Force during the Second World War. He improved the treatment and rehabilitation of badly burned aircrew.[1]

Sir Archibald McIndoe
McIndoe operating at East Grinstead: a painting by Anna Zinkeisen, 1944
Born
Archibald Hector McIndoe

(1900-05-04)4 May 1900
Dunedin, New Zealand
Died11 April 1960(1960-04-11) (aged 59)
London, England
EducationUniversity of Otago
Known forGreatly improved the treatment and rehabilitation of badly burned aircrew
RelativesJohn McIndoe (father)
Mabel Hill (mother)
John McIndoe (brother)
Alfred Hill (uncle)
Harold Gillies (cousin)
Medical career
ProfessionSurgeon
FieldPlastic surgery
InstitutionsHospital for Tropical Diseases
Royal North Stafford Infirmary
Queen Victoria Hospital
AwardsCommandeur de la Légion d'honneur

Early life

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Archibald McIndoe was born 4 May 1900 in Forbury, in Dunedin, New Zealand, into a family of four.[2] His father was John McIndoe, a printer and his mother was the artist Mabel McIndoe née Hill. He had three brothers and one sister. McIndoe studied at Otago Boys' High School and later medicine at the University of Otago. After his graduation he became a house surgeon at Waikato Hospital.

In 1924, McIndoe was awarded the first New Zealand Fellowship at the Mayo Clinic in the United States to study pathological anatomy. The fellowship was for an unmarried doctor and as McIndoe had recently married Adonia Aitkin they had to keep their marriage secret and he sailed without her. When it was no longer possible to maintain the secret she joined him 12 months later. He worked in the clinic as First Assistant in Pathological Anatomy 1925–1927 and published several papers on chronic liver disease. Impressed with his skill, Lord Moynihan suggested a career in Britain, and in 1930 McIndoe moved to London.

When McIndoe could not find work, his cousin Sir Harold Gillies, an otolaryngologist specialising in plastic surgery (who now has an operation for reducing a broken cheekbone named after himself), invited him to join the private practice he ran with Rainsford Mowlem and offered him a job at St Bartholomew's Hospital, where he became a clinical assistant. In 1932, McIndoe received a permanent appointment as a General Surgeon and Lecturer at the Hospital for Tropical Diseases and the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine.

In 1934, McIndoe received a Fellowship of the American College of Surgeons, where he worked until 1939. That year, he became a consulting plastic surgeon to the Royal North Stafford Infirmary and to Croydon General Hospital. In 1938, he was appointed consultant in plastic surgery to the Royal Air Force.

Second World War

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When the Second World War broke out, plastic surgery was largely divided on service lines. Gillies went to Rooksdown House near Basingstoke, which became the principal army plastic surgery unit; Tommy Kilner (who had worked with Gillies during the First World War, and who now has a surgical instrument named after him, the kilner cheek retractor), went to Queen Mary's Hospital, Roehampton, and Mowlem to St Albans. McIndoe moved to the recently rebuilt Queen Victoria Hospital in East Grinstead, Sussex, and founded a Centre for Plastic and Jaw Surgery. There, he treated very deep burns and serious facial disfigurement like loss of eyelids. With McIndoe's support, patients at the hospital formed the Guinea Pig Club, a social club and mutual support network: members included Richard Hillary, Geoffrey Page, Bill Foxley and Jimmy Edwards. The club grew to 649 members by the end of the war.[3][4]

McIndoe was a brilliant and quick surgeon. He not only developed new techniques for treating badly burned faces and hands but also recognised the importance of the rehabilitation of the casualties and particularly of social reintegration back into normal life. He disposed of the "convalescent uniforms" and let the patients use their service uniforms instead. With the help of two friends, Neville and Elaine Blond, he also encouraged the locals to support the patients and invite them to their homes. McIndoe referred to the patients as "his boys", while the staff called him "the Boss" or "the Maestro".[5]

Important work included development of the walking-stalk skin graft, and the discovery that immersion in saline promoted healing as well as improving survival rates for victims with extensive burns – this was a serendipitous discovery drawn from observation of differential healing rates in pilots who had come down on land and in the sea.[6]

Later years

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After the end of the war, McIndoe returned to private practice. His speciality was the "McIndoe nose".

McIndoe was created CBE in 1944 and after the war he received a number of British and foreign honours, including a Commandeur de la Légion d'honneur (Commander of the Legion of Honour)[7] and was knighted in 1947 for his remarkable work on restoring the minds and bodies of the burnt young pilots of the Second World War through his innovative reconstructive surgery techniques. That same year he visited East Africa for the first time, and took up farming on Kilimanjaro. In 1957, with two former pupils, Michael Wood and Tom Rees, he co-founded the African Medical and Research Foundation (AMREF).

He became a member of a council of the Royal College of Surgeons in 1946 and its vice-president in 1958. His marriage to Adonia ended in 1953, and he married Constance Belchem in 1954. In 1958, McIndoe delivered the Bradshaw Lecture at the Royal College of Surgeons on the topic of the reconstruction of the burned face.[8] He took part in the founding of the British Association of Plastic Surgeons (BAPS) and later served as its third President.[9] The Guinea Pig Club continued to meet after the war, and McIndoe remained its President until his death.

Death

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Archibald McIndoe died in his sleep of a heart attack on 11 April 1960, aged 59, in his house at 84 Albion Gate, London.[10] He was cremated at Golders Green Crematorium, and his ashes were given the unique honour for a civilian of being buried at the Royal Air Force church of St Clement Danes in London.

Personal life

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McIndoe married Adonia Aitkin of Dunedin on 31 July 1924. They had two daughters, Adonia and Vanora. They were divorced in 1953. In 1954, McIndoe married Constance Belchem, the former wife of Major-General R. F. K. Belchem.[11]

Legacy

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Blue plaque on McIndoe's former home at Avenue Court, 23–29 Draycott Avenue, Chelsea, London
 
Monument to McIndoe in East Grinstead, by Martin Jennings[12]

On 22 March 1961, the British Minister of Health opened the Blond McIndoe Centre named in his honour at the Queen Victoria Hospital, East Grinstead. The Blond McIndoe Centre, now named the Blond McIndoe Research Foundation, continues research into pioneering treatments to improve wound healing. The Blond McIndoe Research Foundation is a registered charity.

The McIndoe Burns Centre at Queen Victoria Hospital was dedicated in 1994, and there is a burns victim support group centred there which also bears his name.

Specialist science laboratories at Otago Boys' High School, built in 1967, are named in his honour. The school later named one of its houses after McIndoe after the introduction of a house system in 2013.[13][14]

The Gillies McIndoe Research Institute, a major medical research centre in Wellington, New Zealand, is named in honour of McIndoe and his cousin Sir Harold Gillies.[15]

In 2000, an English Heritage blue plaque was erected on McIndoe's former London home at Avenue Court, Draycott Avenue, Chelsea.

A bronze monument commemorating McIndoe by Martin Jennings, whose own father was one of his patients, was unveiled by Princess Anne in East Grinstead High Street, in front of Sackville College, in 2014.[12] It depicts the standing McIndoe resting his hands reassuringly on the shoulders of a seated injured airman, whose burned hands are clawed together, and whose scarred face is turned to one side. The two figures are encircled by a stone bench.[5] Jennings described the airman as "looking up at the sky he cannot fly in any more".[16]

In 2017, The Hollywood Reporter and Deadline reported, a film named The Guinea Pig Club by Roger Donaldson has been made on McIndoe as a maverick surgeon in World War II and his radical methods of healing severely burned bodies.[17][18]

Publications

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  • McIndoe, A. H.; Counsellor, V. S. (1926). "Primary carcinoma of the liver of possible multicentric origin occurring in a case of portal cirrhosis". American Journal of Pathology. 2 (6): 557–66. PMC 1931785. PMID 19969721.
  • McIndoe, A. H.; Counsellor, V. (1927). "A report on the bilaterality of the liver". Archives of Surgery. 15: 589. doi:10.1001/archsurg.1927.01130220092007.
  • McIndoe, A. H. (1928). "Vascular lesions of portal cirrhosis". Archives of Pathology. 5: 23–42.
  • McIndoe, A. H. (1928). "The structure and arrangement of the bile canaliculi". Archives of Pathology and Laboratory Medicine. 6: 598–614.
  • McIndoe, A. H. (1932). "Delayed haemorrhage following traumatic rupture of the spleen". British Journal of Surgery. 20 (78): 249–68. doi:10.1002/bjs.1800207809. S2CID 70414493.
  • McIndoe, A. H. (1937). "The treatment of hypospadias". American Journal of Surgery. 38: 176–185. doi:10.1016/s0002-9610(37)90415-x. S2CID 72499401.
  • McIndoe, A. H. (1937). "Operation for the cure of adult hypospadias". British Medical Journal. 1 (3972): 385–404. doi:10.1136/bmj.1.3972.385. PMC 2088248. PMID 20780489.
  • McIndoe, A. H. (1937). "The application of cavity grafting". Surgery. 1: 535.
  • McIndoe, A. H.; Banister, J. Bright (1938). "An operation for the cure of congenital absence of the vagina". Journal of Obstetrics and Gynaecology of the British Commonwealth. 45 (3): 490–494. doi:10.1111/j.1471-0528.1938.tb11141.x. S2CID 72526349.
  • McIndoe, A. H. (1938). "Correction of the alar deformity in cleft lip and palate". The Lancet. 1: 607. doi:10.1016/s0140-6736(00)86824-5.
  • McIndoe, A. H. (1940). "The functional aspect of burn therapy". Proceedings of the Royal Society of Medicine. 34: 56–65.
  • McIndoe, A. H. (1941). "Diagnosis and treatment of injuries of the middle third of the face". British Dental Journal. 71: 235.
  • McIndoe, A. H. (1948). "Deformities of the male urethra". British Journal of Plastic Surgery. 1 (1): 29–47. doi:10.1016/s0007-1226(48)80007-x. PMID 18874750.
  • McIndoe, A. H. (1948). "The treatment of hypospadias". British Journal of Plastic Surgery. 1 (1): 29–47. doi:10.1016/s0007-1226(48)80007-x. PMID 18874750.
  • McIndoe, A. H. (1949). "Editorial". British Journal of Plastic Surgery. 2 (1): 1–3. doi:10.1016/S0007-1226(49)80002-6.
  • McIndoe, A. H. (1949). "Total facial reconstruction following burns". Postgraduate Medicine. 6 (3): 187–200. doi:10.1080/00325481.1949.11945603. PMID 18139763.
  • McIndoe, A. H. (1950). "Treatment of congenital absence and obliterative conditions of the vagina". British Journal of Plastic Surgery. 2 (4): 254–67. PMID 15410301.
  • McIndoe, A. H. (1950). "Discussion on the treatment of chronic oedema of the leg". Proceedings of the Royal Society of Medicine. 43 (12): 1043–1059. doi:10.1177/003591575004301218.
  • McIndoe, A. H. (1957). "[unknown]". In Skoog, Tord; Ivy, Robert H. (eds.). Transactions of the International Society of Plastic Surgeons: First Congress, Stockholm and Uppsala, 1955. Baltimore: Williams & Wilkins Co. p. 414.
  • McIndoe, A. H. (1958). "The surgical management of Dupuytren's contracture". American Journal of Surgery. 95 (2): 197–203. doi:10.1016/0002-9610(58)90502-6. PMID 13487940.
  • McIndoe, A. H. (1958). "Mammaplasty: indications, technique, and complications". British Journal of Plastic Surgery. 10: 307–320. doi:10.1016/s0007-1226(57)80046-0.
  • McIndoe, A. H.; Owen Smith, B. (1958). "Congenital familial fibromatosis of the gums with the teeth as a probable ætiological factor: report of an affected family". British Journal of Plastic Surgery. 11: 62–71. doi:10.1016/S0007-1226(58)80008-9.
  • McIndoe, A. H.; Rees, T. D. (1959). "Synchronous repair of secondary deformities in cleft lip and nose". Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery. 24 (2): 150–61. doi:10.1097/00006534-195908000-00002. S2CID 71806534.
  • McIndoe, A. H.; Simmons, C. A. (1959). "Discussion on the treatment of congenital absence of vagina with emphasis on long-term results". Proceedings of the Royal Society of Medicine. 52: 952–54. doi:10.1177/003591575905201114.
  • McIndoe, A. H. (1983). "Total reconstruction of the burned face: The Bradshaw Lecture 1958". British Journal of Plastic Surgery. 36 (4): 410–20. doi:10.1016/0007-1226(83)90119-4. PMID 6626818.

See also

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  • Mollie Lentaigne, a medical artist and nurse at East Grinstead who made drawings of McIndoe's procedures

References

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  1. ^ "BBC - WW2 People's War - Archibald McIndoe, plastic surgeon (1900-1960)". www.bbc.co.uk. Retrieved 14 September 2024.
  2. ^ Meikle 2013, p. 109.
  3. ^ "WW2 surgeon Sir Archibald McIndoe statue unveiled". BBC News. 9 June 2014. Retrieved 14 September 2024.
  4. ^ "Story of maverick WW2 'Guinea pig' surgeon to be told on big screen for first time". telegraph.co.uk. 21 May 2017.
  5. ^ a b de Quetteville, Harry (30 May 2014). "The pioneering surgeon who healed men scarred by war, a new monument created in his honour – and the remarkable twist of fate that links them". Daily Telegraph. Archived from the original on 31 May 2014. Retrieved 31 May 2014.
  6. ^ "'I cheated death and joined the Guinea Pig Club'". BBC News. 2 November 2016. Retrieved 14 September 2024.
  7. ^ Brewer, M. (2010). "New Zealand and the Légion d'honneur: Officiers, Commandeurs and Dignites". The Volunteers: The Journal of the New Zealand Military Historical Society. 35 (3): 131–147.
  8. ^ McIndoe 1983.
  9. ^ "Archibald McIndoe". nzhistory.govt.nz.
  10. ^ Meikle 2013, p. 195.
  11. ^ "McIndoe, Sir Archibald (Hector)". Who's Who. A & C Black. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  12. ^ a b "War surgeon Sir Archibald McIndoe and his 'Guinea Pigs' honoured". The Guardian. 4 April 2013. ISSN 0261-3077. Retrieved 14 September 2024.
  13. ^ "Houses » Otago Boys' High School". obhs.school.nz. Retrieved 20 September 2022.
  14. ^ Lewis, John (12 June 2012). "Otago Boys' to introduce house system". Otago Daily Times Online News. Retrieved 20 September 2022.
  15. ^ "Gillies McIndoe Research Institute". Gillies McIndoe Research Institute. Retrieved 14 September 2024.
  16. ^ "WWII plastic surgeon Sir Archibald McIndoe statue appeal". BBC News. 5 April 2013. Retrieved 14 September 2024.
  17. ^ Ford, Rebecca (11 May 2017). "Cannes: Richard E. Grant, Jeremy Irvine, Sam Neill to Star in 'The Guinea Pig Club'". The Hollywood Reporter. Retrieved 14 September 2024.
  18. ^ Lodderhose, Diana (11 May 2017). "Richard E. Grant, Jeremy Irvine and Sam Neill Head To 'The Guinea Pig Club' – Cannes". Deadline. Retrieved 14 September 2024.

Bibliography

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  • Bennett, J. P. (1988). "A history of the Queen Victoria Hospital, East Grinstead". British Journal of Plastic Surgery. 41 (4): 422–440. doi:10.1016/0007-1226(88)90088-4. PMID 3293680.
  • Bishop, Edward (2001). McIndoe's Army. London: Grub Street. ISBN 1-902304-93-4.
  • Hodgkinson, Colin (1957). Best Foot Forward. London: Odhams. – autobiography of a double amputee (both legs) fighter pilot who was treated many times to repair facial damage
  • McCleave, Hugh (1961). McIndoe: Plastic Surgeon. London: Frederick Muller.
  • Mayhew, Emily (2006). The Reconstruction of Warriors: Archibald McIndoe, the Royal Air Force and the Guinea Pig Club. Greenhill Books. ISBN 1-85367-610-1.
  • Meikle, Murray C. (2013). Reconstructing Faces: the art and wartime surgery of Gillies, Pickerill, McIndoe and Mowlem. Dunedin: Otago University Press. ISBN 978-1-877578-39-7.
  • Mosley, Leonard (1962). Faces from the Fire: the biography of Sir Archibald McIndoe. London: Weidenfeld & Nicolson.
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