Fabian Udekwu : Pioneer of Open Heart Surgery in Sub-Saharan Africa

Prof. Fabian Udekwu : Pioneer of Open Heart Surgery in Sub-Saharan Africa

In January 1974, history was made in the medical profession in sub-Saharan Africa when a team of Nigerian surgeons carried out the first open heart surgery at the University of Nigeria Teaching Hospital (UNTH), Enugu. This remarkable surgical operation was spearheaded by Prof. Fabian Udekwu and Sir Magdi Yacoub (Egyptian-British citizen). It was performed on a 19-year-old man who presented with a history of dyspnoea, chest pains, and fatigue and was in heart failure.

After several hours of operation, the heart failure was reversed and the patient survived. Following the extraordinary feat, Udekwu led further open-heart surgeries on six patients at UNTH between 1974 and 1980.

Udekwu was, indeed, Nigeria’s first fully certified cardiothoracic surgeon. He taught as a distinguished professor of surgery at the University of Nigeria Nsukka. He was a Fellow of the American College of Surgeons, the American Association for Thoracic Surgery, the International College of Surgeons, and the West African College of Surgeons. He was also a founding member and Fellow of the Nigerian Academy of Science and has several publications to his credit.

Background and education:

Fabian Anene Ositadimma  Udekwu was born in 1928 in Enugu-Agidi, Anambra State, Nigeria. He attended St. Charles Teachers Training College Onitsha, where he was retained as a faculty member after graduation in 1947, teaching mathematics and geography. He did his London Matriculation Exams by correspondence and after having saved enough money, he proceeded in 1950 to the United States for further studies.

Udekwu did his pre-medical studies in Biology, Chemistry, and Physics in Los Angeles. Subsequently, he attended Loyola University Chicago (Stritch School of Medicine), graduating as a medical doctor in 1957 and specializing in general cardiac and thoracic surgery in 1964. He did his surgical training at Cook County Hospital in Chicago.

Career

After his training at Cook County Hospital, USA, Udekwu returned to Nigeria in 1965 where he began his career in the civil service as a pediatric thoracic and cardiovascular surgeon at the University College Hospital of the University of Ibadan. He fled Ibadan to Biafra at the outbreak of hostilities that marked the beginning of the Nigeria-Biafra war.

Udekwu returned to Nigeria in 1965 after his training at Cook County Hospital, USA, as a pediatric thoracic and cardiovascular surgeon at the University College Hospital of the University of Ibadan. He fled from Ibadan to Biafra at the outbreak of hostilities that marked the beginning of the Nigeria-Biafra war. From 1967, he served as a military surgeon and head of the Biafran teaching hospital in various locations including Enugu and Emekukwu during the war. He was also the secretary to the Biafran Relief and Rehabilitation Association during the war. Later Udekwu was a distinguished professor and head of the department of surgery of the University of Nigeria, Nsukka Teaching Hospital (UNTH), and was the administrative head of the Enugu campus of the university. Udekwu is credited with building up the department of surgery of the University of Nigeria. After several unsuccessful attempts at sourcing funding to establish a modern surgical department from many organizations in the United States, United Kingdom, Scandinavia and through church aid, he was able to scrape together funding from the Enugu campus aided by the contributions of individual Nigerians to build the operating theater and buy the equipment needed to establish facilities for open-heart surgery in Nigeria.

He was one of the pioneers that established cardiac surgery in Nigeria. Professor Udekwu led the team of surgeons that performed the first successful open-heart surgery in Nigeria in 1974 which was the first of its kind in black Africa. Also in the team of surgeons that performed this landmark operation were Professor Sir Magdi Yacoub, Professors Anyanwu C.H., Nwafor D.C., the anesthetist Dr. Shreeniwas Jawalekar and others. This was followed by a series of six further open heart surgeries under Udekwu at the University of Nigeria Teaching Hospital Enugu (UNTH) between 1974 and 1980.

From 1967, he served as a military surgeon and head of the Biafran Teaching Hospital in various locations, including Enugu and Emekukwu during the war. He was also the secretary to the Biafran Relief and Rehabilitation Association during the war.

After the civil war, Udekwu was appointed head of the department of surgery of the University of Nigeria, Nsukka Teaching Hospital (UNTH), and was the administrative head of the Enugu campus of the university.

Udekwu is credited with building the department of surgery of the University of Nigeria. After several unsuccessful attempts at sourcing funds to establish a modern surgical department from many organizations in the United States, United Kingdom, Europe and through church aid, he was able to scrape together funding from the Enugu campus, aided by the contributions of individual Nigerians, to build the operating theatre and buy the equipment needed to establish facilities for open-heart surgery in Nigeria. He was one of the pioneers of cardiac surgery in Nigeria.

Personal life

Udekwu was an avid sportsman, playing football and tennis throughout his life. He was a member of the Enugu Sports Club. He also played music as a hobby, attaining notability as the organist and choirmaster at the Holy Ghost Cathedral Enugu. On 28 April 1956 Udekwu was married to Miss Anna Brita Bystrom. The marriage was blessed with ten children.

Udekwu passed on 17 November 2006 in Uppsala, Sweden, at the age of 78.