Oh was born in Haeju, Korea in 1936 and moved to South Korea in 1947. He received his M.D. degree at the Seoul National University (SNU) College of Medicine in 1960.[1] He completed residencies in neurology at the SNU National Medical Center in Korea and at Georgetown University in Washington, D.C. in the United States in 1970.[2][3][4]
Career
Oh joined the faculty of the University of Alabama at Birmingham (UAB) School of Medicine in 1970. He was given the title of Distinguished Professor of Neurology and Professor of Pathology in 2007.[3] During his tenure, Oh served as chief of Neurology at the Veterans Affairs Medical Center, as director of the Electromyography and Evoked potential Laboratory, and as director of the Muscle and Nerve Histopathology Laboratory[2] By serving in these positions for 43 years, he held one of the longest neurology tenures in American medicine.[2] He also served as director of the UAB Muscular Dystrophy Association Clinic and the Myasthenia Gravis Clinic and is a fellow member of the American Association of Neuromuscular & Electrodiagnostic Medicine (AANEM), American Academy of Neurology, and American Neurological Association.[5]
In 2009, to recognize his accomplishments, the UAB Muscle and Nerve Histpathology Laboratory was renamed to "The Dr. Shin J. Oh Muscle and Nerve Histopathology Laboratory at UAB" by the board of the University of Alabama.[6]
In 1994, Oh and his wife, M. Kim Oh, established an endowed lectureship through the UAB Department of Neurology entitled "The Oh Lecture on Neuromuscular Diseases." The couple established this lectureship in memory of their late daughter, Julie Oh.[7]
Research and contributions
As of 2015, Oh had published 230 articles, 28 books and book chapters, and 237 abstracts, some of which have become classics of the field.[2] Notable contributions to the fields of neurology and electrodiagnostic medicine include:
Inventing "on-nerve needle sensory nerve conduction of the sural nerve" (another nerve probing technique) to make electrophysiological and histological correlation of biopsied diseased nerves.[16][17]
^Shin J Oh (2015). "On-nerve needle nerve conduction study in the sural nerve: A new technique for evaluation of peripheral neuropathy". Clinical Neurophysiology. 126 (9): 1811–1816. doi:10.1016/j.clinph.2014.12.008. PMID25727898. S2CID22411267.
^Shin J Oh (2010). "Intraoperative on-nerve conduction study and conversion factor in the sural nerve". Muscle & Nerve. 42 (3): 373–378. doi:10.1002/mus.21696. PMID20589887. S2CID21297449.