Zvi Laron

Zvi Laron
Born (1927-02-06) February 6, 1927
Czernowitz, Romania (now Ukraine)
Citizenship Israeli
Alma mater Hebrew University Medical School
Occupation pediatric endocrinologist
Known for Laron syndrome

Zvi Laron (Hebrew: צבי לרון, born February 6, 1927) is an Israeli paediatric endocrinologist, born in Cernăuţi, Romania, a professor emeritus at Tel Aviv University.[1] In 1966, he described the type of dwarfism later called Laron syndrome. His research opened the way to the treatment of many cases of growth hormone disorders and of juvenile diabetes.

Biography

Family background and childhood

Laron was born on February 7, 1927, to a Jewish family in the Bukovinian city of Cernăuţi (Czernowitz), then in Romania (now in Ukraine). At the age of 6, he moved with his family to another Bukovinian town, Rădăuţi. Following the June 1941 invasion of the USSR by Nazi Germany, Romania allied itself with Nazi Germany and regained Northern Bucovina (which had been annexed by the USSR in 1940), the 14 years old child and his family were deported to the concentration camps of Transnistria. There he had the chance to survive as a worker in a factory, which was founded in Mogilev by his uncle, Siegfried Sami Jagendorf (1885–1970), in order to save as many Jewish deportees as possible. Accordingly, Laron became a licensed turner.

Studies in Romania and Israel

After the end of the war, Laron was able to complete his high school studies and in 1945 he commenced his studies in medicine at the newly founded Medical School (Institutul medico-farmaceutic) in the town of Timişoara, in western Romania. He was an active member of the Zionist students movement "Hasmonea", and left Romania in 1947 in order to emigrate illegally to Eretz Israel, then Mandatory Palestine. The ship of Jewish refugees from Eastern Europe, "Pan York" (nicknamed in Hebrew "Kibbutz Galuyot") was captured in the Mediterranean Sea by the British navy and its passengers, including Laron, were deported to internment camps in Cyprus. After the proclamation of the State of Israel in May 1948, Laron was freed and allowed to enter the country. After his arrival, he was recruited to work in Jaffa's "Dajani" and Tel Hashomer's hospitals. In 1952, he graduated with MD from the Hadassah Hospital Hebrew University Medical School, Jerusalem. He then did his internship at Rambam Hospital in Haifa. During 1956–1957, he was a research and clinical fellow in paediatrics at the Massachusetts General Hospital and Harvard Medical School Boston, and at a hospital in Pittsburgh, while his fellowships was focalized especially on infantile endocrinology.

Work as endocrinologist in Israel

In 1957, Laron returned to Israel and joined André de Vries in founding the pediatric endocrinological research in Israel. He was one of the founders in 1958 of the Institute for Pediatric and Adolescent Endocrinology at the Beilinson Medical Center in Petah Tikva, affiliated to Tel Aviv University, and led it until 1992. Laron was one of the first members of the teaching staff of the School of Medicine at Tel Aviv University and had a leading role in elaborating the pediatric teaching program at that institution. From 1983 to 1997 Laron was Incumbent of the Irene and Nicholas Marsh Chair in Endocrinology and Juvenile Diabetes, Sackler Faculty of Medicine, Tel Aviv University. He also founded the All-Country Center for Juvenile Diabetes and an endocrinological laboratory aimed to develop new methods of detecting hormones in blood. This laboratory works in the frame of Felsenstein Institute of Research.

Since 1998 Laron has been Professor Emeritus of Pediatric Endocrinology, Tel Aviv University and Director of Endocrinology and Diabetes Research Unit, Schneider Children's Medical Center of Israel. This center was previously known as the Beilinson Medical Center, Petah Tikva.

The well known Laron syndrome, or Laron-type dwarfism described by him in 1966, together with A. Pertzelan and S. Mannheimer, related to a growth hormone receptor mutation is named after him.[2] Resistance to GH was first reported by Laron in 1966. Since then, severe resistance to GH, characterized by grossly impaired growth despite normal levels of GH in serum, has been termed Laron syndrome. The institute of pediatric endocrinology founded and led by him was among the first medical centers to produce and use in therapy the GH and IGF hormone. Prof. Laron was among the founders and editor of the international Juvenile Diabetes Foundation, of the scientific journals Journal of Pediatric Endocrinology and Metabolism, Pediatric and Adolescent Endocrinology and Pediatric Endocrinology Reviews.[3]

Awards

Zvi Laron has received many honours, among them:

Selective list of papers and books

Laron wrote more than thousand scientific papers and wrote and took part to the editing of thirty books.

The Adipose Child. November 1976.

International Beilinson Symposium Staff, Diabetes in Juveniles : Proceedings of the 2nd Beilinson Symposium on the Various Faces in Juveniles. Jerusalem, Israel. 2nd edition, 1977.

International Beilinson Symposium Staff, : Psychological Aspects of Balance of Diabetes in Juvenile : Proceedings of the 3rd Beilinson Symposium, Pt. 2, Herzliya, 1875. September 1977.

Third Joint Meeting of the European Society for Pediatric Endocrinology (ESPE) and the Lawson Wilkins Pediatric Endocrine Society (LWPES) : Proceedings of the Plenary Lectures and Symposia, Jerusalem, October–November 1989. July 1990.

John Boulton, Zvi Laron, Jean Rey, editors: Long Term Consequences of Early Feeding. 1995.

"Somatomedin-1 (recombinant insulin-like growth factor-1): Clinical pharmacology and potential treatment of endocrine and metabolic disorders". Biodrugs, 1999, 11: 55–70.

"The essential role of IGF-1: Lessons from the long-term study and treatment of children and adults with Laron syndrome". The Journal of Clinical Endocrinology & Metabolism, 1999, 84: 4397–4404.

References

  1. "The Growth Hormone Research Society". The Growth Hormone Research Society. Retrieved 12 April 2016.
  2. Laron Z, Pertzelan A, Mannheimer S (1966). "Genetic pituitary dwarfism with high serum concentration of growth hormone—a new inborn error of metabolism?". Isr. J. Med. Sci. 2 (2): 152–5. PMID 5916640.
  3. "Pediatric Endocrinology Reviews - Editors". Pediatric Endocrinology Reviews. Retrieved 12 April 2016.

See also

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