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  1. Dickinson Woodruff Richards war ein US-amerikanischer Internist. 1956 erhielt Richards zusammen mit Werner Forßmann und André Frédéric Cournand den Nobelpreis für Physiologie oder Medizin „für ihre Entdeckungen zur Herzkatheterisierung und zu den pathologischen Veränderungen im Kreislaufsystem“.

  2. Dickinson Woodruff Richards Jr. (October 30, 1895 – February 23, 1973) was an American physician and physiologist. He was a co-recipient of the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine in 1956 with André Cournand and Werner Forssmann for the development of cardiac catheterization and the characterisation of a number of cardiac diseases .

  3. The Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine 1956 was awarded jointly to André Frédéric Cournand, Werner Forssmann and Dickinson W. Richards "for their discoveries concerning heart catheterization and pathological changes in the circulatory system"

  4. Dickinson Woodruff Richards (born Oct. 30, 1895, Orange, N.J., U.S.—died Feb. 23, 1973, Lakeville, Conn.) was an American physiologist who shared the Nobel Prize for Physiology or Medicine in 1956 with Werner Forssmann and André F. Cournand.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  5. Internist, *30.10.1895 Orange (N.J.), †23.2.1973 Lakeville (Conn.); 194761 Professor in New York, 1945–61 Direktor der Columbia medical division des dortigen Bellevue-Hospitals; Arbeiten über pathologische Veränderungen des Herz-Kreislauf-Systems; erhielt 1956 zusammen mit A.F. Cournand und W.T.O. Forßmann den Nobelpreis für Physiologie oder Me...

  6. 7. Apr. 2020 · Dickinson Woodruff Richards was born in Orange, NJ, USA, on 30 October 1895, and educated at the Hotchkiss School in Connecticut. He studied English and Greek at Yale University (1913–17) and then joined the US Army as an artillery instructor, serving in France during the latter stages of World War One.

  7. Dickinson Woodruff Richards established a cardiopulmonary laboratory at Bellevue Hospital with André F. Cournand in 1932. Working with a series of collaborators, the two men pioneered the conceptual merger of the heart and lung into a single organ.