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Harry Angelman

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Harry Angelman
Born13 August 1915
Birkenhead, England
Died8 August 1996(1996-08-08) (aged 80)
Portsmouth, England
NationalityBritish
SpouseAudrey

Harry Angelman (13 August 1915 – 8 August 1996)[1] was a British consultant paediatrician who identified and named Angelman syndrome.

Biography

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Angelman was born in Birkenhead in 1915. He qualified in Liverpool in 1938.[1] Angelman was an enthusiast for the language and country of Italy. He observed three unrelated children who showed similar symptoms of severe intellectual disablement, lack of speech, motor disorders, and happy demeanours. He was in two minds as to whether he should publish his findings, but he described seeing a painting whose name seemed to characterise the symptoms he had observed. The painting showed a laughing boy with a puppet and was by the Renaissance artist Giovanni Francesco Caroto.[1][2] His 1965 paper described what he called "puppet children", inspired by the painting.[3]

His paper was not immediately recognised as important, but later discoveries of similar children led to the idea of renaming the condition Angelman syndrome.[2] An American Angelman Syndrome Support Group was started in Waterlooville, Hampshire, in 1986.[1]

Angelman travelled to talk about his discovery and his work was mentioned as important by U.S. President Bill Clinton. Angelman died due to a colon tumour.[2]

References

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  1. ^ a b c d "Harry Angelman | RCP Museum". history.rcp.ac.uk. Retrieved 14 December 2024.
  2. ^ a b c Audrey Angelman; Robert Todd (18 January 1997). "Obituaries: Harry Angelman, Shevan Abdul, Karim Ayoub, Walter Calvert, Sheila Mary Ross Dronfield (née Williams), Jean Lilian Hallum, Edward Harford-ReesFrank Edward Hobbs, Air Vice Marshall Thomas ("Tom") Conchar Macdonald, Thomas Goronwy Owen, Alex Norman Barron Stott, Basil Strickland, Jennifer Ann Thomson (née Chown)". British Medical Journal Publishing Group. p. 231. doi:10.1136/bmj.314.7075.231. Retrieved 14 December 2024.
  3. ^ Angelman, Harvey (1965). "'Puppet' Children: A report of three cases". Dev Med Child Neurol. 7 (6): 681–688. doi:10.1111/j.1469-8749.1965.tb07844.x. S2CID 53730099.