Massachusetts General Hospital and Harvard Medical School
Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT)
Warren M. Zapol (1942 – 14 December 2021[1]) was the emeritusAnesthetist-in-Chief at Massachusetts General Hospital from (1994–2008[1]) and the Reginald Jenney Distinguished Professor of Anaesthesia at Harvard Medical School. From 1994 to 2008, Zapol served as anesthetist-in-chief at MGH and was the director of the MGH Anesthesia Center for Critical Care Research until his death.
The Warren M. Zapol Professorship in Anesthesiology at Harvard Medical School and the Massachusetts General Hospital is named in his honor. As of 2022, Emery N. Brown is the current Warren M. Zapol Professor of Anesthesiology.[2][dead link]
Zapol's major research efforts included studies of acute respiratory failure in animals and humans. Supported by the National Science Foundation, he has led nine Antarctic expeditions to study the diving mechanisms and adaptations of the Weddell seal.[4] Through that research his team learned how marine mammals avoid the bends and hypoxia (low blood oxygen levels).[4] He was elected to membership in the (then) Institute of Medicine of the National Academy of Sciences in 2002.
In 2003, Zapol and his former research fellow Claes Frostell received the Inventor of the Year award from the Intellectual Property Owners Association for the development of a system to safely deliver inhaled nitric oxide,[5] a technique now used to save the lives of thousands of babies each year that he pioneered with his MGH team.[6]
In 2006, a steep mountain glacier in Antarctica was named for Zapol (78° 35’S, 85° 51’W).[citation needed]
In 2014, Zapol together with his son David Zapol founded Third Pole Therapeutics, a US-based company developing next generation life-saving heart and lung therapies. The company is developing products that will generate and deliver electric nitric oxide.[citation needed]
^Warren M. Zapol; Life at the Frontier: The Third Annual John W. Severinghaus Lecture on Translational Science. Anesthesiology 2011; 114:771–781 doi:https://doi.org/10.1097/ALN.0b013e31820708d7