Louisville Medicine Volume 64, Issue 3 | Page 17

IN REMEMBRANCE LONNIE HOWERTON, JR., MD 1928-2016 Surgery residency at U of L, when he was drafted into the military. They spent the better part of the next two years on a military base in Baumholder, Germany. This provided a wonderful opportunity to travel post-war Europe, and kindled a passion for travel he kept for the rest of his life. Friendships were also created in Germany that lasted a lifetime. Upon returning to the U.S. in 1957, he entered a Urology residency at U of L. He then joined the private practice of his U of L mentor, Dr. Robert Lich, in 1960. He retired from this practice in 1997. Dad was closely involved in the Urology residency program his entire career, and took great pride in the accomplishments of the residents. L onnie W. Howerton Jr., MD, died March 19, 2016. He was born February 15, 1928, to Lonnie W. Howerton and Goldie Mobley Howerton in a house his father built in Olive Hill, KY. Dad was a star basketball player for the Olive Hill Comets basketball team, and was selected 1st team All-State in 1944 when the Comets won the 16th Region title, before losing to Harlan in the state tournament semifinals. He graduated from Olive Hill High School in 1945 as class valedictorian. Though offered Division 1 scholarships to play college basketball, he took the advice of his older brother, Carl, to focus on his collegiate studies in order to pursue a career in medicine. He received early admission to the University of Louisville School of Medicine in 1947, the youngest member of the class. He was selected to the Alpha Omega Alpha Honor Medical Society as a junior student, and graduated in 1951. He married fellow Olive Hill native Phyllis Kiser in 1950. After a general internship at Detroit Receiving Hospital, they returned to Olive Hill in 1952 and Dad established a true general medical practice, rarely found in medicine today. He told stories of delivering teenage primigravidas in isolated hollows while Mom provided anesthesia with chloroform. He once even performed a Scanzoni maneuver (now largely replaced by C-section) on an occipitposterior presentation primigravida in her family home, grandmothers intently watching his every move. He was sometimes paid cash, other times in barter (food, chores, etc.). Mom and Dad returned to Louisville in 1955 so Dad could begin a General Dad was Clinical Professor of Surgery and Pediatrics at U of L and Chief of Pediatric Urology at Kosair Children's Hospital. He staffed pro bono clinics at Kosair Children’s Home for many years. He was co-author of 28 publications and co-author (with Drs. R. Lich and M. Amin) of chapter 1 of Campbell's Urology through 1978. Along with Dr. Allen Lansing, he led a team that performed the first kidney transplant in Kentucky. He developed a method of ureteral reimplantation into the bladder to treat ureterovesical reflux - known as Lich's operation, which is now practiced worldwide. Dad was always a superb problem solver who brought fresh thinking to old problems. In 1968, he performed the first cutaneous ureterostomy in the world on a 4 year old child with a nonfunctional bladder, who was undergoing a kidney transplant. This kidney functioned for 35 years. In a 1974 lecture to the Innominate Society, Dr. Lansing discussed the early days of kidney transplant at U of L. He said: "I must pay tribute there to the excellent early results that I think we have to attribute primarily to Dr. Howerton. The biggest complication