News | Structural Heart | January 20, 2016

Antarctic Explorer Shackleton Posthumously Diagnosed with ‘Hole in the Heart’

Inquiry on the 100th anniversary of the Endurance expedition reveals atrial septal defect

Ernest Shackleton, hole in the heart, Endurance 100th anniversary, Ian Calder

January 20, 2016 — On the 100th anniversary of the Endurance expedition to Antarctica led by Sir Ernest Shackleton, doctors writing in the Journal of the Royal Society of Medicine believe the explorer may have had the congenital defect commonly known as a 'hole in the heart'. Shackleton was capable of severe exertion and made the first crossing of the mountains and glaciers of South Georgia without any health problems. During other expeditions, however, he alarmed his companions with repeated attacks of breathlessness and weakness.

Historians have pondered the cause of Shackleton's physical breakdowns. Inspired by his own experience of crossing South Georgia in a party led by mountaineer Stephen Venables, retired anaesthetist Ian Calder, M.D., with consultant cardiologist Jan Till, M.D., made use of material held in the Scott Polar Research Institute in Cambridge to diagnose an atrial septal defect (hole in the heart).

"The evidence rests in diary entries made by Dr. Eric Marshall, the medical officer of Shackleton's second expedition to the Antarctic in 1907-9," said Calder. "The detection and treatment of an atrial septal defect is now reasonably straightforward, but was not available to Shackleton."

The authors believe that Shackleton knew he had something wrong with his heart because he avoided being examined by doctors who might have tried to prevent him going to Antarctica.

Calder commented, "Some may feel that Sir Ernest was irresponsible in undertaking the leadership of Antarctic expeditions if he suspected a problem, but to paraphrase Dr. Johnson, there is seldom a shortage of prudent people, whilst the great things are done by those who are prepared to take a risk."

Shackleton died of a heart attack in 1922, a few hours after arriving in South Georgia at the beginning of his fourth expedition. He was 47 years of age.

For more information: www.sagepublications.com


Related Content

News | Structural Heart

On July 16, Diagnostic and Interventional Cardiology will present a webinar on "Maximizing Structural Heart Workflows ...

Home July 08, 2024
Home
News | Structural Heart

July 3, 2024 —Jon Kobashigawa, MD, director of the Heart Transplant Program in the Department of Cardiology in the Smidt ...

Home July 03, 2024
Home
News | Structural Heart

June 7, 2024 — Medtronic today announced new data from the CoreValve Evolut Clinical Program, reinforcing the positive ...

Home June 07, 2024
Home
News | Structural Heart

April 25, 2024 — Atlantic Health System’s Morristown Medical Center treated the first patient in New Jersey using ...

Home April 25, 2024
Home
News | Structural Heart

April 9, 2024 — UC Davis Health cardiology team members are among the first in the country to treat patients with ...

Home April 09, 2024
Home
News | Structural Heart

March 25, 2024 — In a groundbreaking medical advancement, three esteemed cardiologists from CLS Health, Dr. Bahaeddin ...

Home March 25, 2024
Home
News | Structural Heart

March 12, 2024 — Medtronic plc, a global leader in healthcare technology, today announced two late-breaking data ...

Home March 12, 2024
Home
News | Structural Heart

February 20, 2024 — As New Jersey’s leading provider of high-quality cardiac procedures and diagnostic testing and an ...

Home February 20, 2024
Home
News | Structural Heart

February 15, 2024 — Abbott announced that the Circulatory System Devices Panel of the Medical Devices Advisory Committee ...

Home February 15, 2024
Home
News | Structural Heart

February 9, 2024 — Physicians in the Smidt Heart Institute at Cedars-Sinai have achieved two significant firsts ...

Home February 09, 2024
Home
Subscribe Now