Лешић, Александар

Link to this page

Authority KeyName Variants
6bceab73-8634-4b1c-8aa1-69b95f4a6a0a
  • Лешић, Александар (1)
Projects
No records found.

Author's Bibliography

Живојин Бумбаширевић : (1920–2008)

Чоловић, Радоје; Лешић, Александар

(Београд : Српска академија наука и уметности, 2020)

TY  - CHAP
AU  - Чоловић, Радоје
AU  - Лешић, Александар
PY  - 2020
UR  - https://dais.sanu.ac.rs/123456789/10435
AB  - Živojin Bumbaširević was born on July 26th, 1920, in Kruševac. He
enrolled at the School of Medicine in Belgrade in 1938. Th e war interrupted his
studies, so he worked as a medic instead. He continued the studies aft er the war
and graduated in 1948.
Aft er completing his internship, he was relocated to the Orthopaedic
Trauma Clinic and in 1950 he commenced his specialisation studies. He passed
t he Specialty Certifi cate Examinations (SCE) in 1955 with fl ying colours. In
1956, he was appointed the head of the department, between 1961 and 1971 he
was assistant director, and between 1971 and 1980 the Director of the Clinic.
Even aft er retiring in 1985, he continued working as a consultant at the
Outpatient Department of the Clinic for several years.
Dr Bumbaširević attended several professional training courses at
orthopaedic and trauma clinics in Paris and Bordeaux.
In 1952, he was elected as an assistant at the School of Medicine. In 1959
his habilitation internship was recognised so he was elected as a docent, and in
1969 he became a professor. He obtained his PhD in 1975, and in 1976 he was
promoted to Full Professor.
He taught orthopaedic and trauma surgery to physicians on specialist
courses. Between 1980 and 1985, he was the Director of Postgraduate Studies
in orthopaedics and traumatology. In 1964, he became a member and, in 1969,
he presided over the speciality certifi cate examinations board for the candidates
taking their SCEs in orthopaedic and trauma surgery. He was also a member
of equivalent boards at Schools of Medicine in Novi Sad and Niš. Between 1967
and 1986, he was on the examination board for candidates taking exams in
general and orthopaedic surgery at the Military Medical Academy (VMA). He
was elected as a corresponding member of the Serbian Academy of Sciences
and Arts (SANU) in 1983, and its full member in 1994.
Academician Bumbaširević wrote two chapters for the textbook Surgery,
edited by S. Petković and S. Bukurov, and one chapter for the monograph
Diabetes mellitus, edited by D. Đurić (1982).
He lectured a lot, by invitation, at national scientifi c gatherings and
international congresses and symposia. He chaired sessions of the World
Association of Orthopaedic Surgeons and Traumatologists (SIKOT) and may
other congresses of national orthopaedic and trauma associations. His papers
were cited in Campbell’s leading orthopaedic textbook Operative Orthopaedics-
Surgical Techniques. Academician Bumbaširević was the head of several
scientifi c research projects fi nanced by the Government of the Republic of Serbia, the SANU and the city of Belgrade. He mentored 29 candidates for
doctoral and master’s degrees and was on the evaluation committee for the
defence of 59 masters theses and doctoral dissertations at the schools of
medicine in Belgrade, Novi Sad, Niš and Skopje, as well as at the Military
Medical Academy in Belgrade.
For a long time, he was a board member of the Serbian Archives of
Medicine, Acta Orthopaedica Iugoslavica, Acta Biologiae et Medicinae
Experimentalis. Since 1978, he was a member of the editorial board of the
periodical Revie de Chirurgie Оrthopédique et Réparatrice de L’appareil Moteur
(Masson Paris); an external editor of the periodical Beitrage zür Orthopaedie
und Traumatologie and Orthopedia y Traumatologia (Harkov), formerly a
prominent USSR journal but now Ukrainian, since 1993.
Bumbaširević organised many scientifi c gatherings and congresses. Th e
biggest was Th e East and West Combined Meeting, the world congress of
orthopaedic and trauma surgeons, held in Belgrade in 1988.
On the occasion of the celebrations of the 200th Anniversary of French
Revolution in 1989, he organized a meeting of Serbian and French orthopaedic
surgeons in Belgrade.
He was a member of three sections of the Serbian Medical Society
(SMS), the Yugoslav Association of Surgeons, the Yugoslav Association of
Orthopaedic and Trauma Surgeons, a full member of the Medical Academy of
the Serbian Medical Society, and a full and honorary member of orthopaedic
and trauma associations in several countries.
He was also a long-standing member of the Board of Directors of the
Society for Cultural Cooperation between France and Yugoslavia and, since
1993, an honorary member of its Presidency.
He received many honours from the SMS, schools of medicine in
Belgrade, Zagreb and Niš, a Silver and Gold Tree diploma from JUOT (the
Orthopaedic Trauma Association of Yugoslavia), various diplomas from the
JUOT, the Association of Medical Societies of Yugoslavia, the City of Belgrade,
SIKOT, University of Brno (Universitas Purkiniana), the Priorov Medal from
the USSR Central Orthopaedic and Trauma Institute, a medal and diploma
from the Medical Academy in Roma. He was also the recipient of the July 7th
Award, Order of Labour with Golden Wreath, Order of Merits for the People
with Silver Rays, the Knight of the Legion of Honour Medal, etc. He was a
member of the Crown Council since its foundation.
Professional and scientific contribution by academician Živojin
Bumbaširević presents a mixture of clinical and surgical practices and scientifi c
papers that resulted from many years of dedicated work. He was one of the fi rst
orthopaedic surgeons in the country who applied a serious scientifi c approach
to the treatment of synovial joint traumas, spinal cord injuries, haemophilic arthropathy, and bone tumours. Each of these areas benefi ted greatly from his
expertise. He was the fi rst national author whose tumour treatment technique
is quoted in Campbell’s Operative Orthopaedics, the “Bible” of orthopaedic
surgeons.
Prof. Bumbaširević understood the impact of trauma on synovial joints,
the consequences and treatment methods. In his paper from 1953, he gave a
detailed clinical and statistical work situation report at the Orthopaedic
Trauma Clinic for the period between 1947 and 1950. Th is was the fi rst time
that a systematic description of epidemiology and management of limb injuries
was provided in former Yugoslavia. For over 50 years and with a great
commitment, Bumbaširević studied trauma injuries, especially those sustained
in traffi c accidents, through clinical and scientifi c work, research projects and
scientifi c publications. In the early 1950s, he recognized the importance of
understanding road traffi c traumas and polytraumas from surgical as well as
psychological points of view, and the propensity to cause accidents, which was
labelled as such much later and the term accident prone persons introduced.
Bumbaširević noticed the problem of femoral neck fracture in the early
1950s when he published a study of 81 patients treated with compression
osteosynthesis, reporting only 4 fatalities – an impressive result even by today’s
standards. Th e work of prof. Bumbaširević, including his own observations
regarding the treatment of femoral neck fractures with hip (Austin Moore)
prosthesis and transtrochanteric fractures, was a pioneering undertaking. Prof.
Bumbaširević was one of the few authors who, in 1965, published papers on
injuries and fractures of amputees. He also described radiographic signs of
bone healing aft er injuries sustained by athletes, wrestlers and height jumpers,
the area not suffi ciently researched up until then, for which he won acclaim,
and still does nowadays, and whose results are acknowledged through work of
many of today’s orthopaedists.
Prof. Bumbaširević was particularly interested in spinal injuries.
Together with engineers from the Faculty of Electrical Engineering and the
Serbian Academy of Sciences and Arts, he demonstrated treatment of paralysed
patients with exoskeletons. Th e latest model of the exoskeleton (Phoenix)
weighs only 12 kilograms and has clinical applications, which proves that this
was not a utopian idea.
Prof. Bumbaširević was one of our first scientists to describe
hyperextension injuries of the spine while studying cases of his patients in
1964, at the time when there was very little knowledge of such conditions. In
1962, he described the successful operative treatment of unstable spinal
fractures, which represented a pioneering work in spinal surgery of that time.
He published the results of the treatment of, and prognosis for, 225 patients
with spinal cord injuries in his paper entitled Analysis of the neurological results in 225 cases of traumatic tetraplegia and paraplegia (Analyse des résultats
neurologiques chez 225 cas de paraplégie et tétraplégie traumatique) published
in the Revue de Chirurgie Orthopédique.
Another research area to which Prof. Bumbaširević contributed greatly
was haemophilic arthropathy. In 1961, he gave a precise description of the
clinical and radiological picture of haemophilia and haemophilic arthropathy.
However, bone tumours were the largest and perhaps the most important area
which prof. Bumbaširević researched throughout his career. It was an area of
special signifi cance at the time, bearing in mind that bone tumours are diffi cult
to diagnose and treat which is a challenge even today, in the era of modern
technologies. In the 1950s, it was a ground-breaking mission.
Th e greatest tribute to his understanding of bone tumour pathology is
the fact that he is quoted in the most important textbook for orthopaedic
surgeons Campbell’s Operative Orthopaedics (1990). In 1955 already, he
described a case of the chondrosarcoma of the scapula in the Serbian Archives
while in 1957 he produced the fi rst outline of the tumour registry in former
Yugoslavia, emphasizing the importance of a comprehensive overview of this
issue, and not simply observations regarding the treatment of only one isolated
case. He also explained the treatment of malignant tumours of the
humeroscapular areas and preservation of upper limb function following
radical removals of a tumour. Th is kind of approach to the preservation of
extremities in orthopaedic oncology was publicised 20 years after the
publication of the text Limb Salvage Procedures. In the treatment of osteoclasts,
surgeons applied radical resection – a modern form of treatment of tumours
– repairing bone defect by inserting a bone plug or by endoprosthetic
replacement while localising tumour in the proximity of the femur. Th ey
indicate that no clinical diagnosis can be made on the basis of clinical and
radiological images (a widely spread notion at the time), and stipulate that a
tumour biopsy is required prior to the treatment. A large study of 75 patients
at the Orthopaedic Trauma Clinic, during the period 1950–1955 and 1961–
1970, presented the achieved results and the guidelines for the treatment of
bone tumours.
Prof. Bumbaširević also described osteoid osteomas, benign types of a
tumour, and gave a detailed description of the tumour localisation, age and the
clinical picture of the patients, a precise radiological description by which this
entity is characterised. In an article published in 1968, six patients diagnosed
with eosinophilic granuloma were described, as well as diff erent localisations
of granuloma and pathohistological verifi cations of their clinical diagnosis.
Solitary xanthomatous tumours were also explicated. Tumour resection
treatment was described in the articles Diaphyseal Epiphyseal Resection in Bone
Tumours of the Knee, and in Résection en bloc et reconstruction dans le cas de la
tumeur des cellules géantes – grade II, in 1977. He also introduced computers and ultraviolet light in orthopaedic
surgery and arteriography in bone tumour diagnosis; novel diagnostic and
treatment methods in those days.
In 1958, Prof. Bumbaširević established a bone marrow bank for
compensation of bone defects, described fractures and changes in epileptic
patients, and the use of electromagnetic fi elds in the treatment of fractures and
stimulation of bone growth.
PB  - Београд : Српска академија наука и уметности
T2  - Живот и дело српских научника
T1  - Живојин Бумбаширевић : (1920–2008)
SP  - 341
EP  - 386
UR  - https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_dais_10435
ER  - 
@inbook{
author = "Чоловић, Радоје and Лешић, Александар",
year = "2020",
abstract = "Živojin Bumbaširević was born on July 26th, 1920, in Kruševac. He
enrolled at the School of Medicine in Belgrade in 1938. Th e war interrupted his
studies, so he worked as a medic instead. He continued the studies aft er the war
and graduated in 1948.
Aft er completing his internship, he was relocated to the Orthopaedic
Trauma Clinic and in 1950 he commenced his specialisation studies. He passed
t he Specialty Certifi cate Examinations (SCE) in 1955 with fl ying colours. In
1956, he was appointed the head of the department, between 1961 and 1971 he
was assistant director, and between 1971 and 1980 the Director of the Clinic.
Even aft er retiring in 1985, he continued working as a consultant at the
Outpatient Department of the Clinic for several years.
Dr Bumbaširević attended several professional training courses at
orthopaedic and trauma clinics in Paris and Bordeaux.
In 1952, he was elected as an assistant at the School of Medicine. In 1959
his habilitation internship was recognised so he was elected as a docent, and in
1969 he became a professor. He obtained his PhD in 1975, and in 1976 he was
promoted to Full Professor.
He taught orthopaedic and trauma surgery to physicians on specialist
courses. Between 1980 and 1985, he was the Director of Postgraduate Studies
in orthopaedics and traumatology. In 1964, he became a member and, in 1969,
he presided over the speciality certifi cate examinations board for the candidates
taking their SCEs in orthopaedic and trauma surgery. He was also a member
of equivalent boards at Schools of Medicine in Novi Sad and Niš. Between 1967
and 1986, he was on the examination board for candidates taking exams in
general and orthopaedic surgery at the Military Medical Academy (VMA). He
was elected as a corresponding member of the Serbian Academy of Sciences
and Arts (SANU) in 1983, and its full member in 1994.
Academician Bumbaširević wrote two chapters for the textbook Surgery,
edited by S. Petković and S. Bukurov, and one chapter for the monograph
Diabetes mellitus, edited by D. Đurić (1982).
He lectured a lot, by invitation, at national scientifi c gatherings and
international congresses and symposia. He chaired sessions of the World
Association of Orthopaedic Surgeons and Traumatologists (SIKOT) and may
other congresses of national orthopaedic and trauma associations. His papers
were cited in Campbell’s leading orthopaedic textbook Operative Orthopaedics-
Surgical Techniques. Academician Bumbaširević was the head of several
scientifi c research projects fi nanced by the Government of the Republic of Serbia, the SANU and the city of Belgrade. He mentored 29 candidates for
doctoral and master’s degrees and was on the evaluation committee for the
defence of 59 masters theses and doctoral dissertations at the schools of
medicine in Belgrade, Novi Sad, Niš and Skopje, as well as at the Military
Medical Academy in Belgrade.
For a long time, he was a board member of the Serbian Archives of
Medicine, Acta Orthopaedica Iugoslavica, Acta Biologiae et Medicinae
Experimentalis. Since 1978, he was a member of the editorial board of the
periodical Revie de Chirurgie Оrthopédique et Réparatrice de L’appareil Moteur
(Masson Paris); an external editor of the periodical Beitrage zür Orthopaedie
und Traumatologie and Orthopedia y Traumatologia (Harkov), formerly a
prominent USSR journal but now Ukrainian, since 1993.
Bumbaširević organised many scientifi c gatherings and congresses. Th e
biggest was Th e East and West Combined Meeting, the world congress of
orthopaedic and trauma surgeons, held in Belgrade in 1988.
On the occasion of the celebrations of the 200th Anniversary of French
Revolution in 1989, he organized a meeting of Serbian and French orthopaedic
surgeons in Belgrade.
He was a member of three sections of the Serbian Medical Society
(SMS), the Yugoslav Association of Surgeons, the Yugoslav Association of
Orthopaedic and Trauma Surgeons, a full member of the Medical Academy of
the Serbian Medical Society, and a full and honorary member of orthopaedic
and trauma associations in several countries.
He was also a long-standing member of the Board of Directors of the
Society for Cultural Cooperation between France and Yugoslavia and, since
1993, an honorary member of its Presidency.
He received many honours from the SMS, schools of medicine in
Belgrade, Zagreb and Niš, a Silver and Gold Tree diploma from JUOT (the
Orthopaedic Trauma Association of Yugoslavia), various diplomas from the
JUOT, the Association of Medical Societies of Yugoslavia, the City of Belgrade,
SIKOT, University of Brno (Universitas Purkiniana), the Priorov Medal from
the USSR Central Orthopaedic and Trauma Institute, a medal and diploma
from the Medical Academy in Roma. He was also the recipient of the July 7th
Award, Order of Labour with Golden Wreath, Order of Merits for the People
with Silver Rays, the Knight of the Legion of Honour Medal, etc. He was a
member of the Crown Council since its foundation.
Professional and scientific contribution by academician Živojin
Bumbaširević presents a mixture of clinical and surgical practices and scientifi c
papers that resulted from many years of dedicated work. He was one of the fi rst
orthopaedic surgeons in the country who applied a serious scientifi c approach
to the treatment of synovial joint traumas, spinal cord injuries, haemophilic arthropathy, and bone tumours. Each of these areas benefi ted greatly from his
expertise. He was the fi rst national author whose tumour treatment technique
is quoted in Campbell’s Operative Orthopaedics, the “Bible” of orthopaedic
surgeons.
Prof. Bumbaširević understood the impact of trauma on synovial joints,
the consequences and treatment methods. In his paper from 1953, he gave a
detailed clinical and statistical work situation report at the Orthopaedic
Trauma Clinic for the period between 1947 and 1950. Th is was the fi rst time
that a systematic description of epidemiology and management of limb injuries
was provided in former Yugoslavia. For over 50 years and with a great
commitment, Bumbaširević studied trauma injuries, especially those sustained
in traffi c accidents, through clinical and scientifi c work, research projects and
scientifi c publications. In the early 1950s, he recognized the importance of
understanding road traffi c traumas and polytraumas from surgical as well as
psychological points of view, and the propensity to cause accidents, which was
labelled as such much later and the term accident prone persons introduced.
Bumbaširević noticed the problem of femoral neck fracture in the early
1950s when he published a study of 81 patients treated with compression
osteosynthesis, reporting only 4 fatalities – an impressive result even by today’s
standards. Th e work of prof. Bumbaširević, including his own observations
regarding the treatment of femoral neck fractures with hip (Austin Moore)
prosthesis and transtrochanteric fractures, was a pioneering undertaking. Prof.
Bumbaširević was one of the few authors who, in 1965, published papers on
injuries and fractures of amputees. He also described radiographic signs of
bone healing aft er injuries sustained by athletes, wrestlers and height jumpers,
the area not suffi ciently researched up until then, for which he won acclaim,
and still does nowadays, and whose results are acknowledged through work of
many of today’s orthopaedists.
Prof. Bumbaširević was particularly interested in spinal injuries.
Together with engineers from the Faculty of Electrical Engineering and the
Serbian Academy of Sciences and Arts, he demonstrated treatment of paralysed
patients with exoskeletons. Th e latest model of the exoskeleton (Phoenix)
weighs only 12 kilograms and has clinical applications, which proves that this
was not a utopian idea.
Prof. Bumbaširević was one of our first scientists to describe
hyperextension injuries of the spine while studying cases of his patients in
1964, at the time when there was very little knowledge of such conditions. In
1962, he described the successful operative treatment of unstable spinal
fractures, which represented a pioneering work in spinal surgery of that time.
He published the results of the treatment of, and prognosis for, 225 patients
with spinal cord injuries in his paper entitled Analysis of the neurological results in 225 cases of traumatic tetraplegia and paraplegia (Analyse des résultats
neurologiques chez 225 cas de paraplégie et tétraplégie traumatique) published
in the Revue de Chirurgie Orthopédique.
Another research area to which Prof. Bumbaširević contributed greatly
was haemophilic arthropathy. In 1961, he gave a precise description of the
clinical and radiological picture of haemophilia and haemophilic arthropathy.
However, bone tumours were the largest and perhaps the most important area
which prof. Bumbaširević researched throughout his career. It was an area of
special signifi cance at the time, bearing in mind that bone tumours are diffi cult
to diagnose and treat which is a challenge even today, in the era of modern
technologies. In the 1950s, it was a ground-breaking mission.
Th e greatest tribute to his understanding of bone tumour pathology is
the fact that he is quoted in the most important textbook for orthopaedic
surgeons Campbell’s Operative Orthopaedics (1990). In 1955 already, he
described a case of the chondrosarcoma of the scapula in the Serbian Archives
while in 1957 he produced the fi rst outline of the tumour registry in former
Yugoslavia, emphasizing the importance of a comprehensive overview of this
issue, and not simply observations regarding the treatment of only one isolated
case. He also explained the treatment of malignant tumours of the
humeroscapular areas and preservation of upper limb function following
radical removals of a tumour. Th is kind of approach to the preservation of
extremities in orthopaedic oncology was publicised 20 years after the
publication of the text Limb Salvage Procedures. In the treatment of osteoclasts,
surgeons applied radical resection – a modern form of treatment of tumours
– repairing bone defect by inserting a bone plug or by endoprosthetic
replacement while localising tumour in the proximity of the femur. Th ey
indicate that no clinical diagnosis can be made on the basis of clinical and
radiological images (a widely spread notion at the time), and stipulate that a
tumour biopsy is required prior to the treatment. A large study of 75 patients
at the Orthopaedic Trauma Clinic, during the period 1950–1955 and 1961–
1970, presented the achieved results and the guidelines for the treatment of
bone tumours.
Prof. Bumbaširević also described osteoid osteomas, benign types of a
tumour, and gave a detailed description of the tumour localisation, age and the
clinical picture of the patients, a precise radiological description by which this
entity is characterised. In an article published in 1968, six patients diagnosed
with eosinophilic granuloma were described, as well as diff erent localisations
of granuloma and pathohistological verifi cations of their clinical diagnosis.
Solitary xanthomatous tumours were also explicated. Tumour resection
treatment was described in the articles Diaphyseal Epiphyseal Resection in Bone
Tumours of the Knee, and in Résection en bloc et reconstruction dans le cas de la
tumeur des cellules géantes – grade II, in 1977. He also introduced computers and ultraviolet light in orthopaedic
surgery and arteriography in bone tumour diagnosis; novel diagnostic and
treatment methods in those days.
In 1958, Prof. Bumbaširević established a bone marrow bank for
compensation of bone defects, described fractures and changes in epileptic
patients, and the use of electromagnetic fi elds in the treatment of fractures and
stimulation of bone growth.",
publisher = "Београд : Српска академија наука и уметности",
journal = "Живот и дело српских научника",
booktitle = "Живојин Бумбаширевић : (1920–2008)",
pages = "341-386",
url = "https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_dais_10435"
}
Чоловић, Р.,& Лешић, А.. (2020). Живојин Бумбаширевић : (1920–2008). in Живот и дело српских научника
Београд : Српска академија наука и уметности., 341-386.
https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_dais_10435
Чоловић Р, Лешић А. Живојин Бумбаширевић : (1920–2008). in Живот и дело српских научника. 2020;:341-386.
https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_dais_10435 .
Чоловић, Радоје, Лешић, Александар, "Живојин Бумбаширевић : (1920–2008)" in Живот и дело српских научника (2020):341-386,
https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_dais_10435 .