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Lakshman Samaranayake
Born
NationalitySri Lankan British
Known forOral fungal diseases and related human mycoses.
Scientific career
FieldsOral_microbiology
Candidiasis
InstitutionsUniversity of Hong Kong
University of Queensland

Lakshman 'Sam' Samaranayake is an internationally, renowned Sri Lankan clinical academic with expertise in diagnostic clinical microbiology and research, senior executive level administration, and dental pedagogy and is best know for his work with Candidiasis. After serving as a Consultant Clinical Microbiologist in Glasgow, UK he joined the academia. Since then, working in five different trans-continental universities, he has authored over 450 scientific communications, cited over 27,000 occasions (h-index 90))[1]. Subsequently, he served over 12 years as the Executive Dean of two major dental schools in Hong Kong (a top five ranking dental school globally), and Australia at the University of Hong_Kong and University of Queensland, respectively. A highly sought-after speaker, he has addressed professional bodies in over 40 countries, and received numerous accolades for his research and unique contributions to dentistry, including the coveted King James IV Professorship of the Royal College of Surgeons of Edinburgh, UK, and the Distinguished Scientist Award of IADR, USA [2]. He holds many visiting/honorary professor appointments in the universities of Thailand, Australia, Indonesia, the UK, the Middle East, and China.


Education

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Professor Samaranayake was born in Sri Lanka and attended the Royal College, Sri Lanka for his secondary education. He then earned his Bachelor of Dental Sciences (BDS) degree from the University of Peradeniya, Sri Lanka, and received his Doctoral Degree (DDS), at the University of Glasgow, UK through research into oral candidal infections, where he served as a Consultant/ Senior Lecturer in Oral Medicine and Pathology; simultaneously he was an honorary consultant in microbiology to the Greater Glasgow Health Board, Scotland (1985-1990). He obtained his training in medical and oral microbiology, at the Glasgow Royal Infirmary, for the Fellowship of the Royal College of Pathologists, UK under Professor Morag Timbury. Subsequently, he became a Member, and then a Fellow of the College, by examination in clinical microbiology. He was the first dentist from South East Asia to do so, and the fourth, internationally to gain such recognition. Then he served as an Associate Professor at the University of Alberta, Canada (1990-1991), and Reader /Professor University of Hong Kong(1991-2013), University of Queensland, Australia (2014-2016), Kuwait University (2017-2018) and as a Visiting Professor at Sharjah University, UAE through invitation (2018-2020). Currently, he is a Professor Emeritus at the University of Hong Kong and an honorary professor at the Universities of Thailand, Indonesia, Oman, China, and Sri Lanka.

Academic and research career

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With an h index of 88 derived from over 480 scientific communications, and cited in the literature on more than 26,200 occasions he is amongst the top 2% of global scientist, and considered as the foremost, global authority on oral fungal diseases and related human mycoses [3]. Additionally, he is amongst the top ten most cited scholars in the discipline of Dentistry.

Publications

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Notable Books

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  • Samaranayake Lakshman, Essential Microbiology for Dentistry, fifth edition 2019 Edinburgh, Churchill, 2011 pp 400 (Korean edition 2004; Polish Edition 2005, Portuguese Edition 2015, Chinese Edition 2015, Abridged Edition for the Al Farabi School of Dentistry, Saudi Arabia, 2014) [4].
  • Scully C and Samaranayake LP, Clinical Virology in Oral Medicine & Dentistry, Cambridge University Press, 1992; pp 489
  • Samaranayake LP, Scheutz F and Cottone J Infection Control for the Dental Team, Copenhagen, Munksgaard, 1991, pp 125 (translated into French, Spanish, Portuguese, Italian and Chinese)
  • Samaranayake LP and MacFarlane TW Oral Candidosis, Bristol, Wright-Butterworth, 1990, pp 266
  • MacFarlane TW and Samaranayake LP Clinical Oral Microbiology, Butterworth, 1989, pp 284.

Awards & Achievements

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He is the first Sri Lankan and the Asian to awarded the King James IV Professorship of the Royal College of Surgeons of Edinburgh for exceptionally outstanding research in dental surgical sciences (conferred in 2013) [5]. He has received numerous awards and honors as follows:

  • The first medical or dental professional from Asia to receive the coveted King James IV Professorship award of the Royal College of Surgeons of Edinburgh for services to surgical sciences
  • The first Sri Lankan dental professional to receive the Honorary Doctor of Science (DSc) award from the University of Peradeniya
  • The only Sri Lankan, thus far, to have spearheaded, as a Dean, the creation of a university faculty that is ranked number 1 in the World (by QS World University Rankings)
  • The only Sri Lankan to be a Dean of two major University Faculties (at the University of Hong Kong, and University of Queensland, Australia
  • The first Sri Lankan dental professional to receive the Fellowship of the Royal College of Pathologists, UK
  • The first Asian dentist, to receive the Distinguished Scientist Award from the International Association for Dental Research
  • The sole dentist from Sri Lanka to receive an honorary fellowship from the Royal College of Physicians and Surgeons of Glasgow, Royal Australasian College of Dentists, the Royal College of Dental Surgeons of Edinburgh, and the Hong Kong College of Dental Surgeons
  • The first, to be awarded the Tam Wah-Ching Professor of Dental Sciences at The University of Hong Kong

References

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  1. ^ "Lakshman Samaranayake google scholar profile". scholar.google.com/. Retrieved 2021-05-19.
  2. ^ "Lankan first Asian to receive King James IV professorship". archives.dailynews.lk//. Retrieved 2021-05-19.
  3. ^ "Prof Lakshman Samaranayake". www.srilankafoundation.org/. Retrieved 2021-05-19.
  4. ^ "Essential Microbiology for Dentistry". www.elsevier.com/. Retrieved 2021-05-19.
  5. ^ "UQ welcomes new School of Dentistry leader". www.uq.edu.au. Retrieved 2021-05-19.
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