Gerald B. Appel is an American physician and kidney researcher known both for his celebrity patients and for his scholarly work on the renal manifestations of systemic lupus erythematosus and other diseases of the glomeruli.
Education
He has also published more than three hundred academic papers and book chapters on diseases of the glomeruli, several with his wife, Alice Sue Appel, Doctor of Philosophy He established, at Columbia University, the first center for glomerular diseases In the United States.
Career
Appel gained widespread recognition during the early 2000s for his role in securing a kidney transplant for the professional basketball player Alonzo Mourning and for enabling Mourning to return to the court for an National Basketball Association championship. However, Appel had also treated numerous other celebrities, including a dying Charles Lindbergh in the mid-1970s and the late Chicago White Sox co-owner Eddie Einhorn at the time of that team"s World Series victory in 2005 in additional to several high profile political figures.