Heritage Snapshot: Part 117 by Richard Schaefer - City News Group, Inc.

Community Calendar

DECEMBER
S M T W T F S
30 01 02 03 04 05 06
07 08 09 10 11 12 13
14 15 16 17 18 19 20
21 22 23 24 25 26 27
28 29 30 31 01 02 03
View Events
Submit Events

Heritage Snapshot: Part 117

By Richard Schaefer
Community Writer
07/09/2014 at 08:27 AM

Mrs. Melvin Judkins describes her husband’s pioneering work in studying the blood vessels of the heart: “Enlisting the help of a staff necropsy pathologist, he obtained a plastic impregnated human heart. Equipped with a roll of stainless steel spring wire, pliers, and a wire cutter he spent countless hours fashioning shaping wires. When not scrubbed in his cath lab, he concentrated on bending shaping wires, using various pipes and faucets at the scrub sink to mold the wires. He would scrutinize the shape, place the wire over a chest radiograph on the view box, contemplate, and make changes. When a shape appeared workable, he threaded the proximal end of a catheter over the bending wire and immersed it in boiling water to set the new shape. When cooled and with the wire removed, the catheter assumed the new shape. Then he experimented with the “new” catheter on the heart specimen. When satisfied that he had achieved a workable shape, he began using the coronary catheters, making modifications as experience dictated…. He perfected ingenious configurations of left and right coronary catheters to accommodate for variations in aortic size and shape. He created sets of bending wires and then preshaped the catheters, customized to the patient’s anatomy.…” Melvin introduced “the Judkins Technique,” later identified by Dr. Charles T. Dotter as the “gold standard for anatomical coronary diagnosis,” by scientific exhibit and lecture, astonishing both radiologists and cardiologists. In late 1967, Radiology published details of his technique and examples of his outstanding coronary radiographic images. Soon, he had a well-trained angiography team who shared his dedication to obtaining the maximum amount of diagnostic information on which to base clinical management with minimum risk to the patient and minimum radiation exposure to the team. Together, they hosted a growing number of observers. Dr. Judkins became a diplomate of the American Board of Radiology in 1967. In 1968 a company in Miami, Florida, began fabricating preshaped Judkins coronary catheters. Another company in Portland, Oregon, began making sets of his shaping wires. In addition to his coronary and pigtail catheters, Dr. Judkins envisioned catheters with exaggerated curvatures that would consistently enter a target vessel when introduced and manipulated transfemorally. Dr. Judkins approached the X-ray evaluation of the blood vessels of the heart through the large femoral artery in the groin. In early 1969, David B. Hinshaw, Sr., MD, dean of the Loma Linda University School of Medicine and one of Melvin’s Class of 1947 classmates, invited Melvin to join his faculty. The invitation was disquieting to the Dr. and Mrs. Judkins. They were contented Oregonians. He was professor of radiology and director of cardiovascular radiology at the University of Oregon and presided over a new research laboratory. Nevertheless, the Judkins’ made the request a matter of prayer. Melvin P. Judkins, MD, accepted the challenge and became professor and chair of the department of radiation sciences and director of cardiovascular laboratories in Loma Linda in July 1969. The new University Hospital was two years old. For six months, while implementing his transition to Loma Linda, Dr. Judkins consulted with departmental staff, assessed needs, formulated plans, and worked with administration to implement changes. He joined the faculty full time on January 1, 1970. Until the end of his career, Dr. Judkins built and maintained a world-class academic department that would bring honor to God and Loma Linda. In so doing, he initiated departmental sponsorship of subspecialty training for selected staff. He added academically oriented radiologists to his faculty. He started an ongoing program to upgrade or replace existing equipment. He added diagnostic ultrasound, neuroradiology, and CT scanning with the most sophisticated equipment available, operated by radiologists with expertise in each modality. He strengthened postgraduate training by subspecialty rotations and expanded them to include fellowship programs in appropriate subspecialties. He developed a curriculum and offered a training program for radiologic technologists who sought to gain skills they would need in a cardiovascular laboratory. By November 1970, Dr. Judkins had designed and opened a new, state-of-the-art laboratory, trained a technical support team, and performed the first coronary angiogram in Loma Linda. Countless observers started pouring in from around the world to study Judkins’ exquisite radiographic films and to learn about equipment requirements to achieve quality images. Mrs. Judkins explains Dr. Judkins’ perspective: “Although a properly shaped catheter was the key to success, he always emphasized that his technique was not confined to the use of his catheters. The Judkins technique embraced a combination of professional skills…and manipulation of unique preshaped catheters, proper patient position for filming, and high quality radiographic hardware to produce and record optimum information while protecting patient and laboratory team from unnecessary radiation exposure. His was a constant advocacy for meticulous attention to all of the procedural details he outlined in his original and subsequent publications. However, the allure of technical excellence was never to subvert a compassionate focus on the patient himself. The well-being and safety of each patient was his lifelong passion.” Although Dr. Judkins carried a full patient load in addition to his administrative responsibilities, he generously shared both his technical expertise and his extensive knowledge about radiographic equipment. As a master teacher, he possessed a rare genius for explaining complex problems for experts and lay people alike. He shared his insights with peers and students and thoroughly explained the complexities of sophisticated angiographic equipment to several generations of angiographers.

Related Articles

Photo Courtesy of: City of Moreno Valley

Celebrating the holidays with those who matter.
A young boy and his grandmother sitting at a dinner table smiling while the boys mother brings another dish to the table.

Photo Courtesy of: Carl M. Dameron

Kathleen Dameron, international cross-cultural communication specialist, working at Dameron Communications.

Photo Courtesy of: West Valley Water District

West Valley Board and Staff with awards

Photo Courtesy of: Christina Gaitan

first place winners Dancing " CHS Feel The Rhythm "

Photo Courtesy of: City of Moreno Valley

Come find your new best friend!
A woman petting a dog that is wearing a headband with antlers and bells on it.

Photo Courtesy of: City of Moreno Valley

Grow your startup with us in Moreno Valley, CA.

Photo Courtesy of: City of Moreno Valley

Add more fur to your family.
Magic, a female black and white, two-year-old Siberian Husky mix.

Photo Courtesy of: Southern California Regional Rail Authority

Passegers boarding the Metrolink Holiday Express Train

Photo Courtesy of: Dignity Health St. Bernardine Medical Center

Dr. Mir Wasif Ali MD, FACS, as its new Chief of Staff. Dr. Ali, renowned for his distinguished tenure marked by innovation and compassionate patient care, will assume this critical role for a two-year term starting January 2026

Photo Courtesy of: The CARE Project, Inc.

Danny Riggs’ widow, Sarah, along with his two kids, Steven and Kali, are pictured with Carrie Madrid and Pat Washburn, the director of the Men 2 Program. A $5,000 Adam’s Angels grant was awarded to the children of Danny Riggs, who sadly passed away from breast cancer.

Photo Courtesy of: City of Moreno Valley

Holiday Tree lighting Ceremony written in green lettering with a christmas ornament that has a lit upo christmas tree in front of city hall

Photo Courtesy of: City of Moreno Valley

children aged 5-12 can enjoy a variety of activities, including art projects, games, sports, and more in supervised, activity-packed days.
Day Camp Morneo Valley with a young boy smiling at the camera

--> -->