Wilson Greatbatch invented the pacemaker in 1960. Greatbatch was working for a medical research company when he accidentally created the pacemaker. Greatbatch was building an oscillator to record heart sounds when he accidentally used the wrong transistor. The transistor Greatbatch had used was 100 times more powerful than the one he intended to use. This transistor emitted an electrical pulse the mimicked the human heart beat. Greatbatch immediately recognized his new invention as a new kind of pacemaker. It took 2 years of creating prototypes before presenting the pacemaker to a surgeon. William Chardack, a surgeon, partnered with Greatbatch. The two of them wired the pacemaker to the heart of a dog where it flawlessly controlled
Wilson Greatbatch invented the pacemaker in 1960. Greatbatch was working for a medical research company when he accidentally created the pacemaker. Greatbatch was building an oscillator to record heart sounds when he accidentally used the wrong transistor. The transistor Greatbatch had used was 100 times more powerful than the one he intended to use. This transistor emitted an electrical pulse the mimicked the human heart beat. Greatbatch immediately recognized his new invention as a new kind of pacemaker. It took 2 years of creating prototypes before presenting the pacemaker to a surgeon. William Chardack, a surgeon, partnered with Greatbatch. The two of them wired the pacemaker to the heart of a dog where it flawlessly controlled