George Redmayne Murray (20 June 1865 – 21 September 1939) was an English physician who pioneered in the treatment of endocrine disorders.
[1] In 1891, he introduced the successful treatment of myxedema, with injections of sheep thyroid extract,[2] the first instance of hormone replacement therapy.
[3] Murray was educated at Eton and Trinity College, Cambridge.
[4] He was appointed Heath professor of comparative pathology at Durham University in 1893, and physician to the Royal Victoria Infirmary at Newcastle in 1898.
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