Carter, L. Philip

L. Philip Carter, MD Surgical Medical Director of University
Medical Center Perioperative Services and former Chief of the
Division of Neurosurgery in the University of Arizona
Department of Surgery, died Tuesday, July 6, 2010 after a long
and courageous battle with cancer. He was 71. Dr. Carter
served as the Chief of the UA Division of Neurosurgery from
1988-93. Dr. Carter was born in St. Louis, MO to parents,
Dorothy and Russell Carter. His family moved to Des Moines,
Iowa in 1955, where he attended high school and was co-
captain of the football and basketball teams. He graduated in
1957, and entered the University of Iowa for pre-medical
studies. He was elected to honorary fraternities Phi Eta Sigma
and Omicron Delta Kappa, and was accepted to Washington
University (St. Louis) School of Medicine. He graduated in 1964
and took a rotating internship at Harbor View Hospital in
Seattle. In 1965, he enlisted in the U.S. Air Force, serving as
captain and general medical officer at Otis Air Force Base in
Massachusetts, where he was in charge of medical education.
In 1967, he was a resident in general surgery at St. Luke's
Hospital in New York City, where he developed an interest in
vascular surgery. In 1968, Dr. Carter became a neurosurgical
resident at the newly formed Barrow Neurological Institute
(BNI) in Phoenix, under the direction of John R. Green, MD.
During his first year of neurosurgical residency, Dr. Carter was
greatly influenced by James R. Atkinson, MD, and worked in
the neurosurgical laboratory on a technique to continuously
measure cortical blood flow. Upon completing his residency,
he obtained an International College of Surgeons Fellowship to
neurosurgery departments in Europe and Canada. Following
this experience, he returned to BNI in 1973, where he
developed the microsurgery research laboratory. Using thermal
techniques, he defined the time limits of reversible ischemia
and obtained a patent on modifications of thermal diffusion
flowmetry. From 1982 to 1987, Dr. Carter served as Chief of
Cerebrovascular Surgery at BNI working closely with BNI
Chairman Robert F. Spetzler, MD. He helped establish a stroke
unit and published seminal papers on intraoperative cerebral
blood-flow measurements. He edited the book Neurovascular
Surgery with Drs. Robert F. Spetzler and Mark G. Hamilton. In
1988, he accepted the position as Professor and Chief of
Neurosurgery at the UA College of Medicine. The first fully
trained neurovascular surgeon in Tucson, Dr. Carter
standardized certain neurosurgical monitoring in trauma and
vascular neurosurgery in the intensive care unit. He also helped
pioneer a joint study on interstitial brachytherapy for tumors.
He was instrumental in creating the partnership with BNI to
train UA neurosurgery residents. In 1993, Dr. Carter accepted
the position of Professor and Chairman of the Department of
Neurosurgery and Residency Program Director at the University
of Oklahoma School of Medicine. While at Oklahoma, he
helped supervise triage and care for the victims of the
Oklahoma City bombing. In 1997, he resigned his position at
Oklahoma and returned to Tucson to join Western
Neurosurgery. In 2005, he was appointed Surgical Medical
Director of Perioperative Services at UMC and again appointed
Professor in the Division of Neurosurgery, where he continued
to be involved in teaching medical students and neurosurgical
residents. The UA Department of Surgery recently honored Dr.
Carter at the inaugural dinner of the L. Philip Carter, MD,
Neurosurgical Alumni Society. More than 150 friends and
colleagues from throughout the country gathered to recognize
Dr. Carter's significant contributions to the field of
neurosurgery, to surgical education and to the UA College of
Medicine. Dr. Carter was named president of the Western
Neurosurgical Society earlier this year, one of the most senior
and prestigious leadership positions in clinical neurosurgery.
Throughout his career, Dr. Carter authored two books and
more than 100 book chapters and scientific articles. He has
given numerous lectures and presentations at national and
international neurosurgical meetings. He held two patents on
neurosurgical instrumentation. Dr. Carter is survived by his wife
of 20 years, Colleen Carter; and children, Kristin Carter
Pesqueira, M.D. (Victor), Melinda Albert (Gary), Chad Carter
(Candice); his stepchildren, Shauna Gliss (Jochen), and
Christopher O'Brien (Katherine); his grandchildren, Chloe and
Lindsey Pesqueira, Zachary and Ella Albert, Tony Ermeri, and
Abby and Michael Gliss; his brother, John Carter M.D.;
brothers-in-law, William Harrington, Judge Charles Harrington
and Timothy Harrington; and sister-in-law, Maureen Harrington
Britton. A Memorial Service will be held Sunday, July 18, 2010
2:00 p.m., at EAST LAWN PALMS MORTUARY CHAPEL, 5801 E.
Grant Road, in Tucson. An additional Memorial Service will be
held at University Medical Center at a date to be announced. In
lieu of flowers, the family suggests that gifts be made in Dr.
Carter's memory to the L. Philip Carter M.D. Neurosurgical
Alumni Society, Neurosurgery Education Fund, University of
Arizona Foundation, 1111 N. Cherry Avenue, P.O. Box 210109,
Tucson, AZ 85721.

Published in the Tucson Newspapers on July 13, 2010