The Edmonton Protocol was primarily developed by Dr James Shapiro (transplant surgeon), Jonathan Lakey Ph.D., Dr Edmond Ryan (endocrinologist), Gregory Korbutt Ph.D., Dr. Ellen Toth, Dr. Garth Warnock, Dr. Norman Kneteman, and Ray Rajotte Ph.D., at the University of Alberta Hospital and the Surgical-Medical Research Institute.
Estelle Rosemary Ramey (August 27, 1917 – September 8, 2006) was an American endocrinologist, physiologist and feminist who became internationally known for refuting surgeon and Democratic Party leader Edgar Berman, who stated that women were unfit to hold high public office because of "raging hormonal imbalances."
Mutahar Fauzia (born 1952), American reproductive endocrinologist and OB/GYN of Pakistani origin
Eugène Gley (1857–1930), French physiologist and endocrinologist
Norman Wettenhall (Henry Norman Burgess Wettenhall, 1915–2000), Australian paediatric endocrinologist and ornithologist
John A. Galloway (born December 8, 1928) is an endocrinologist who has made major contributions to the study and treatment of diabetes.
It is named after Dr. Grant Liddle (1921–1989), a Pioneering American Endocrinologist at Vanderbilt University, who discovered it in 1963.
Leo Lutwak (1928–2006), American nutritionist, endocrinologist, and biochemist
After a nodule is found during a physical examination, a referral to an endocrinologist, a thyroidologist or otolaryngologist may occur.
The New York Times credits Dr. James Levine, an endocrinologist at the Mayo Clinic, as the popular inspiration for the treadmill desk.