Background
He was born in Sirkazhi. His father Captain T. S. Balasubramaniam was an Assistant Surgeon in the Government Hospital then
He was born in Sirkazhi. His father Captain T. S. Balasubramaniam was an Assistant Surgeon in the Government Hospital then
Professor.BRM studied at the Emergency High School in Trichy. He completed an Mississippi in General Surgery from the Madras Medical College and went on to complete Fellowship of the Royal College of Surgeons at Edinburgh in 1947.
He set up the Department of Neurosurgery at the Government General Hospital, Chennai in 1950, the Department of Neurosurgery at the Madras Medical College and founded the Institute of Neurology, Madras in the 1970s. He was awarded the Padma Bhushan and the Dhanvantri Award for his contribution to the field of Neurosurgery in India. In 1960, Doctor B. Ramamurthi and his team, Doctorates
V. Balasubramaniam, South. Kalyanaraman and T. South. Kanaka supported by their neurologist counterparts Doctorandus.G.Arjundas and K.Jagannathan, became the earliest team in India to perform Stereotactic surgery procedures.
In the early 1970s, Doctor Ramamurthi built the Institute of Neurology, Madras on the lines of the Montreal Neurological Institute at Canada, with all branches of neurosciences under one roof. He started the Doctor A. Lakshmipathi Neurosurgical Centre at the Voluntary Health Services (VHS) Hospital at Adyar in 1977-1978, named after his father-in-law, Doctor A. Lakshmipathi.
VHS Hospital was the brainchild of Doctor K. South. Sanjivi. B. Ramamurthi served as the Dean of the Hospital and Principal of the Madras Medical College and Honorary Vice Chancellor of the University of Madras during his long and extensive years as a teacher, mentor and guide.
He was appointed as the President of the World Federation of Neurosurgical Societies in 1987 and also served as the former President of the National Board of Medical Examinations in India.
Amongst the many units of neurosurgery he helped set up, the National Brain Research Centre (Manesar, near New Delhi), as an apex body for the coordination of brain research in the country, was his dream come true. He also became a Fellow of the National Academy of Medical Sciences in 1962, Fellow of the Academy of Sciences in 1972, Fellow of the Indian National Science Academy in 1981 and Fellow of the Royal Society of Medicine of London in 1983.