Los Angeles Times

Establishe­d Cedars- Sinai cardiac unit

DR. JACK MATLOFF, 1933 - 2015

- By Elaine Woo elaine. woo@ latimes. com Twitter: @ewooLATime­s

Dr. Jack Matloff, an innovative heart surgeon and educator who in 1988 establishe­d the heart and lung transplant programs at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center, has died there after a long illness.

Matloff, who died Thursday, was 82.

Matloff joined Cedars- Sinai in 1969 when it had a modest cardiac surgery program. The founding chairman of its cardiothor­acic surgery department, he attracted other top surgeons to the hospital, which last year performed more heart transplant­s than any other medical center in the country.

“He was a first- class cardiac surgeon,” said Dr. Toby Cosgrove, chief executive and president of the Cleveland Clinic in Ohio. “Heleft a promising career at Harvard, went to Cedars and propelled it into one of the major cardiac centers on the West Coast.”

During his career, Matloff performed more than 4,000 heart operations, including successful bypass surgeries for such Hollywood notables as James Garner, Milton Berle and Rock Hudson.

“Cardiac bypass was his forte. He put us on the map,” said Dr. Shlomo Melmed, a Cedars- Sinai vice president and dean of its medical faculty.

Matloff was born in New Haven, Conn., on March 13, 1933, the son of Hyman Matloff, a milkman, and his wife, Ruth. He earned his undergradu­ate degree from Yale University in 1954 and his medical degree from Tufts University in1958.

Over the next decade he taught and practiced in the Harvard University medical system, where one of his mentors was Dr. Dwight Harken, considered the father of heart surgery and the intensive care unit.

Matloff was recruited to Cedars- Sinai by Dr. Jeremy Swan, a noted cardiologi­st who co- invented the Swan-Ganz catheter for measuring blood flow and heart function.

In the late 1960s, openheart surgery was a new frontier in medicine with high risks of post- operative illness and death.

Matloff ’ s surgical skill, along with his emphasis on improving patients’ lifestyle and using cholestero­l- lowering-drugs, helped to brighten the outlook.

“He was one of those pioneers who brought downthe complicati­on rate of heart surgery dramatical­ly,” Melmed said. “He improved mortality rates and brought modern medical miracles to very high- risk procedures.”

Twenty- seven years after he founded the heart transplant program, it has grown intothe largest in the nation, with 120 adult heart transplant­s completed in 2014.

Matloff, who wrote several hundred scientific papers, spearheade­d a program to track the progress of thousands of the hospital’s cardiac patients. His efforts resulted in the developmen­t of a comprehens­ive database that has been used in studies published in such peer- reviewed journals as Lancet and the New England Journal of Medicine.

He also founded courses at Harvard that educated cardiac surgeons in the politics and economics of healthcare, Cosgrove said.

He advised many medical centers seeking to start or expand cardiac surgery units, including the Shaare Zedek-Medical Center in Jerusalem.

Matloff, who retired from Cedars- Sinai in 1997, was known for his sensitive, gentle style — not the typical personalit­y profile for surgeons.

He called many of his bypass patients to congratula­te them on every anniversar­y of the life- saving surgery he performed.

“He called it their rebirth day,” said his son, Stephen.

Besides his son, he is survived by his wife of 48 years, Martha Bernier Matloff; a daughter, Lori Matloff Goler; two brothers, David and Kenneth; and six grandchild­ren.

 ?? Cedars- Sinai ?? SENSITIVE, GENTLE Matloff marked bypass patients’ “rebirth days.”
Cedars- Sinai SENSITIVE, GENTLE Matloff marked bypass patients’ “rebirth days.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States