Professor Martin Elliott: One of the Great Ormond Street Hospital's longest-serving doctors

Few staff at the hospital are as knowledgeable as the professor, whose skills bridge the gap between surgery and research

Jamie Merrill
Monday 23 November 2015 21:03 GMT
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Research scientist and paediatric surgeon Martin Elliott has been involved with groundbreaking research and treatment at GOSH for more than 30 years.

A former medical director of the hospital, he bridges the gap between surgery and research with skills ranging from heart-bypass surgery to correcting congenital lung disorders.

Most recently, he combined research into stem cell therapy and cutting-edge surgical techniques to carry out the first stem-cell supported tracheal transplant.

The operation, which was carried out on a critically ill 13-year-old child in 2010, replaced the male patient's trachea with a donor windpipe laced with the patient's own stem cells so it would not be rejected.

There are few staff as knowledgeable or experienced at the hospital as Professor Elliot, so much so that he is in high demand beyond the wards and operating theatres of GOSH.

As well as consulting on teamwork for major airlines he has offered his skills to Formula 1 teams, drawing on his experience working hand in hand with other surgeons during lengthy and complex cardiac procedures.

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