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Rodolfo Di Massa, M.D.
1927 - 2005
"Explore Forever My Love"
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r.
Rodolfo Di Massa was a physician, visionary inventor, author of
murder mysteries and a musician with a deep love of science and
cosmology. He was born in Italy in 1927. He obtained a medical
degree from Milan University in 1951. In 1954 he was awarded a
one-year Fulbright Scholarship to the Jersey City Medical Center.
In 1956 he returned to America and became a permanent resident
under a First Preferential Quota Visa issued by the State Department
for persons deemed to be an asset to the United States. He was
awarded a Cardiovascular Research Fellowship at Irvington House,
Belleview Medical Center in New York from 1957 to 1958. During
this period, he wrote several papers on rheumatic fever and rheumatic
heart disease one of which was published in the New England
Journal of Medicine. He practiced internal medicine and cardiology
in Stratford, Connecticut from 1957 to 1970 and he served as the
Rotating Director of the Cardiac Clinic at Bridgeport Hospital,
a Yale affiliated institution.
In 1970, he moved to Sacramento, California where he practiced
internal medicine and cardiology and was an Assistant Clinical
Professor of Medicine in the UC Davis Department of Cardiology.
In 1973, he moved to San Jose and served as the Associate Chief
of the Primary Care Clinic at the Santa Clara Valley Medical Center
and as Assistant Clinical Professor of Medicine in Stanford University’s
Department of Internal Medicine.
In 1979, after attending a conference at Stanford related to
coronary dissection after angioplasty, he conceived a possible
solution to this fatal complication. His solution was to add a
“second stage” to an ongoing angioplasty session whereby
a very thin, specially engineered biometal cylinder, later known
as the “Di Massa Sleeve,” and now commonly referred
to as a cardiac stent, would be secured to the inflated balloon,
threaded to the dilation site and left in place. At the same time,
he also conceived the idea of coating stents with a polymer or
other biochemical product aimed at preventing local clotting.
In April 1979, the Institute for Medical Research, Santa Clara
Valley Medical Center, awarded him a small grant to carry out
a pilot trial of his ideas, and he conducted numerous successful
experiments. He later continued his research at the Stanford Research
Institute in Palo Alto. In 1986, the Di Massa Sleeve was presented
at the International Meeting of the American Heart Association
in Dallas, Texas. More than twenty years later, these ideas have
become reality. As a pioneer in the field of stent technology,
Dr. Di Massa’s revolutionary ideas and inventions have helped
save thousands of lives.
His loving wife of 50 years, Mariangela, his two sons Rudy and
Frank, daughter-in-law Karen and his two beloved grandchildren,
Vincent and Kevin, will forever miss his love, wit, strength and
intellect.
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