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...shock and sorrow were profound last month when Najarian was indicted by a U.S. federal grand jury on 18 felony counts related to his work. Najarian, 67, who has pleaded not guilty, is accused of offenses ranging from embezzlement and income-tax evasion to conspiring to deceive the Food and Drug Administration. "When I heard the news," said Beverly Massegee of Ranger, Texas, who credits Najarian with saving her daughter's life, "I sobbed...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: ONCE A HERO | 5/15/1995 | See Source »

...Najarian's trial, scheduled to begin later this year, is already shaping up to be a compelling courtroom drama. Prosecutors will seek evidence of duplicity from uni-versity administrators and government officials, while the defense is expected to summon an army of patients to portray a man motivated by nothing but the Hippocratic oath. "I'd go to the ends of the earth for him,'' says Charles Fiske of Bridgewater, Massachusetts, whose 11-month-old daughter Jamie in 1982 became the world's youngest recipient of a successful liver transplant performed by Najarian. Scott Jameson of Minneapolis, Minnesota, who recently...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: ONCE A HERO | 5/15/1995 | See Source »

...Najarian's life had seemed the very model of an American success story. The son of Armenian immigrants, he attended the University of California, Berkeley, on a football scholarship and later turned down an offer to play for the Chicago Bears in favor of going to medical school at the University of California at San Francisco. He stayed there for a residency in surgery, joined the faculty and soon became one of the first practitioners in a glamorous new field of medicine: organ transplantation...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: ONCE A HERO | 5/15/1995 | See Source »

First in San Francisco and later as chief of surgery at the University of Minnesota, Najarian focused on kidney transplants, struggling to improve the dismal success rate. Early on, only a third of patients survived more than three years. They were dying, Najarian knew, mainly because of tissue rejection. Their immune systems targeted transplanted organs as foreign and marshaled white blood cells to destroy the invaders. But Najarian saw a solution. With a colleague, he worked out a method for purifying a new drug called antilymphocyte globulin, or ALG, a potent cocktail of antibodies capable of countering the lethal reaction...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: ONCE A HERO | 5/15/1995 | See Source »

Minnesota ALG, as it became known, turned out to be highly effective. As patient survival rates improved, other surgeons clamored to get hold of the potion. Between 1970, when Najarian obtained permis-sion from the FDA to produce and use the compound on an experimental basis, and 1992, when the FDA shut down the operation, Minnesota ALG was shipped to 175 transplant centers around the world and was used by more than 50,000 patients. Along the way, it generated an estimated $80 million in revenues, enough to finance a $13 million production facility on the University of Minnesota...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: ONCE A HERO | 5/15/1995 | See Source »

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