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John
Shea, MD John J. Shea,
Jr., M.D. is the son of Ear, Nose and Throat specialist John J.
Shea, Sr., M.D. (1889-1952). Dr. Shea, Jr. attended Notre Dame,
where he graduated magna cum laude, and Harvard Medical School,
where he graduated with honors in 1947. He did his residency at
the Massachusetts Eye and Ear Infirmary in Boston and served in
the United States Navy Medical Corps during the Korean War.
Dr. Shea became interested
in the treatment of hearing loss and went to Los Angeles to
study with Dr. Howard House in 1953 and to Vienna, Austria in
1954 to study at the University of Vienna. He performed the
first successful stapedectomy in May, 1956. The patient was a 54
year-old housewife who could no longer hear even with a hearing
aid. Dr. Shea removed the stapes, covered the oval window
opening with a vein graft removed from the back of the patient's
hand, and inserted a prosthesis to replace the diseased stapes
bone. The patient’s hearing was restored and she heard well for
the rest of her life. Dr. Shea has performed nearly 40,000
stapedectomies during his career with recovery of hearing in
more than 90%. His technique with very little modification is
now used all over the world.
Dr. Shea has pioneered
numerous techniques in the treatment of hearing loss and
dizziness, developed many instruments and prostheses to restore
hearing, and worked to advance the knowledge and understanding
of the treatment of ear disease. He is a Clinical Professor in
the Ear, Nose and Throat Departments of the University of
Tennessee, the University of Mississippi, the University of
North Carolina and Tulane University. He is a member of more
than fifty scientific societies and has received honorary
doctorates from Christian Brothers University and Rhodes College
in Memphis and honorary fellowships from the Australian and
English Royal College of Surgeons.
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