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  2. He published twelve books and more than 700 scientific articles. His most noted textbook, Heart Disease, was first published in 1931 and became a classic in the field.

  3. Mar 30, 1999 · Dr White wrote 12 books and ≈758 scientific articles. He won hundreds of well-deserved awards. He always kept an open mind for new developments. On his return from England in 1914, he brought with him the exciting new ECG developed by Einthoven in 1903. He was the first to use it in the United States for clinical research.

    • René Favaloro
    • 1999
  4. In 1931, his classic work Heart Disease was published. During his lifetime, White wrote 12 books and more than 700 scientific articles. Paul Dudley White, the son of a family practitioner, was born on June 6, 1886, in Roxbury, Massachusetts.

    • Marc A. Shampo, Robert A. Kyle
    • 1988
  5. With the dawning of the 20th century, however, new discoveries – the radiograph, electrocardiograph (ECG) and cardiac catheter, to name a few – transformed the ability of doctors to diagnose and treat heart disease. One of the pioneers who ushered in the era of modern cardiology was an American physician named Paul Dudley White.

    • Siang Yong Tan, Erika Kwock
    • 10.11622/smedj.2016075
    • 2016
    • Singapore Med J. 2016 Apr; 57(4): 215-216.
  6. He published twelve books and more than 700 scientific articles. His most noted textbook, Heart Disease, was first published in 1931 and became a classic in the field. His interest in the electrophysiology of the heart would eventually pair him with Drs. Louis Wolff and John Parkinson, who together described the Wolff-Parkinson-White syndrome.

  7. Paul Dudley White: The Father of American Cardiology* J. WILLIS HURST, M.D. Department of Medicine (Cardiology), Emory University School of Medicine, Atlanta, Georgia, USA Paul Dudley White is widely acclaimed as the father of American cardiology (Fig. 1). What did he do? When did he do it? How did he do it? Why did he do it?

  8. I urge all those who are interested to read Dr. White's autobiography, My Life and Medicine, published in 1971 1 and Dr. White's biography, Take Heart, written by Oglesby Paul in 1986 2. These two books, plus previous articles of my own 3, 4 , served as the original sources for most of the information used in the preparation of this document.