Waldemar Lech Olszewski (3 September 1931 – 8 November 2020) was a Polish lymphologist.[1][2][3] His main area of study is the human lymphatic system.[4][5] Clinical and research interests comprise vascular surgery, transplantation, physiology and surgery of the lymphatic system[6] and immunology. He discovered fundamental processes in human tissues connected with function of the lymphatic system.[7][8]
Olszewski published around 600 publications, seven scientific books and is a member of numerous medical bodies.[9]
Early life
Waldemar Lech Olszewski was born on 3 September 1931 in Piastów, Warsaw, Poland into a family of landowners, his father was a linguist and a banking specialist. He received his General Certificate of Education in 1948 in Warsaw and undertook university studies, first in the Faculty of Law, Warsaw University from 1948 to 1950 and then in the Faculty of Medicine at Warsaw University. Graduating in 1954, Olszewski passed the Board in Surgery exams in 1962 and received his PhD in 1962 and D.Science in 1968.
From 1970 Olszewski was an associate professor at the Department of Surgery, the Medical Academy, and the Medical Research Center at Polish Academy of Sciences in Warsaw. In 1978 he was made a full professor at the same centers, and chairman of the Clinical Department of Surgery, Ministry of Internal Affaires/Polish Academy of Science Hospital, Warsaw.[10]
Olszewski later worked at the Medical Research Center, Polish Academy of Sciences[11][12] (Head of Dept) and Ministry of Internal Affaires Clinical Hospital, Warsaw, Poland (Chief Consultant).
Olszewski was the father of one daughter. He died on 8 November 2020, at the age of 89.[13]
Research
Olszewski received postgraduate training and carried out research studies at Hammersmith Hospital, London from 1962 to 1963, then at Harvard Medical School in Boston, United States of America, from 1968 to 1970. He worked at City Hospital, Warsaw, and then Dept. of Surgery, Medical Academy, and Medical Research Center, Warsaw as head of Dept. of Surgical Research & Transplantation and since 1997 as Chief of Clinical Department of Surgery, Ministry of Internal Affaires/Polish Academy of Sciences Hospital, Warsaw. Other professional positions include Visiting Professor at Radiumhospitalet, Oslo, (since 1976-), St. Bartholomew's Medical School, London (since 1994-), Research Officer World Health Organization, Madras-Pondicherry-Benares, India (since 1992-).[14]
Served as President of European Society for Surgical Research in 1977-78
President of International Society of Lymphology in 1989-91
President of Polish Society for Immunology in 1995-98
Olszewski served as a member of editorial boards of many international medical journals, including:[15][16]
Main scientific contributions include designing and introducing into clinical practice the surgical lympho-venous shunts (1966), discovery of spontaneous rhythmic lymphatic contractility in humans (1980), proving that bacterial factor is responsible for development of human limb lymphedema (1994),[19] introducing low-dose, long-term penicillin administration for prevention of chronic dermatitis and lymphangitis in Asian countries (1996), detecting the phenomenon of non-specific elimination of cell grafts (1990), preservation of tissues for transplantation in dehydrating sodium chloride (2003).[20]
Olszewski WL (2011). "Pathology and Histochemistry". In Rockson SG, Lee BB, Bergan JJ (eds.). Lymphedema: A Concise Compendium of Theory and Practice. Berlin: Springer. ISBN978-0-85729-566-8.[29]
^"Olszewski WL (author search)". PubMed. National Center for Biotechnology Information (NCBI), U.S. National Library of Medicine. Retrieved 23 February 2015.