Sir James Mackenzie (born April 12, 1853, Scone, Perthshire, Scot.—died Jan. 26, 1925, London) was a Scottish cardiologist and a pioneer in the study of cardiac arrhythmias. He was the first to make simultaneous records of the arterial and venous pulses to evaluate the condition of the heart, a procedure that laid the foundation for much future research. Mackenzie also drew attention to the question of the heart’s capacity for work, paving the way for the study of the energetics of the heart muscle.
After receiving his M.D. degree at the University of Edinburgh in 1882, Mackenzie practiced medicine for more than a quarter of a century in Burnley, Lancashire, where he was also physician to Victoria Hospital.
After his move to London at the age of 54, Mackenzie established a successful practice as a consulting physician. His reputation grew rapidly. In his classic text The Study of the Pulse (1902), he described an instrument of his own devising that he called a “polygraph,” which allowed the user to correlate the arterial and venous pulses with the beat of the heart itself. This instrument enabled Mackenzie to make important and original distinctions between harmless and dangerous types of pulse irregularities. In his ambitious text Diseases of the Heart (1908), Mackenzie summarized his diagnostic work on pulsation and cardiovascular disease. He also convincingly demonstrated the efficacy of the drug digitalis in the treatment of cardiac arrhythmias. During World War I he served as a consultant to the Military Heart Hospital, an institution he had been instrumental in founding. He was knighted in 1915.