Wyndham Lloyd-Davies was born on 24 June 1934 in Wolverhampton,[1] where he spent his childhood.[2] He completed his early education from Rugby school, where he sustained a fracture of the tibia during a rugby game; the injury kept him confined for a year.[2] In 1952, he gained admission to study medicine at St Thomas' Hospital.[2] One of his early junior posts was at the Kent and Canterbury Hospital.[2][3]
Career
Upon returning to St Thomas' Lloyd-Davies assisted in setting up a dialysis unit.[2] He gained a Master of Science degree after completing a year of research in San Francisco.[2] There, in 1970 with Frank Hinman and in collaboration with the Donner Laboratory, University of California, he completed early studies of the bladderepithelium with a scanning electron microscope, comparing its appearance to the moon's surface.[4][5] They photographed the surface of the bladder and urethra at a magnification of 30,000 times, and found it to be far from regular.[4][6] They noted that the irregularity became exacerbated by infection, hindering washout.[4] They found that the irregularities resolved with urethral and bladder distension.[4][6]
Lloyd-Davies co-authored A Colour Atlas of Urology, first published in 1983.[8] It contains images including those of pathological specimens, photographs of the bladder at endoscopy and diagrams that explain diagnostic procedures.[9] 70 images relate to lesions of the penis and scrotum.[9]
Personal life and death
From his first marriage to Elizabeth he had two daughters; Vanessa Lloyd-Davies, a Major in the RAMC, and Fiona, a documentary film maker.[2]
Lloyd-Davies died from metastatic pancreatic cancer on 25 March 2023, at the age of 88.[2][1]
^ abcd"Division of urology". Bulletin - Alumni Faculty Association, School of Medicine. Vol. 14. San Francisco: University of California. 1970. p. 4.
^Aurora, Amrit Lal (1977). "15. Vesical calculus disease of childhood". In Reen, Robert Van (ed.). Idiopathic Urinary Bladder Stone Disease. Department of Health, Education, and Welfare, Public Health Service, National Institutes of Health. p. 234.