Andreas Roland Gruentzig was born in Dresden,
Germany on 25 June 1939, shortly before the start of
World War II. His father, Dr. Wilmar Gruentzig (1902–1945), was a secondary-school science teacher with a
PhD in
chemistry. Wilmar was conscripted into the meteorological service of the
Luftwaffe during World War II. He presumably died during the war. His mother was Charlotta (née Zeugner) Gruentzig (1907-1995), and a teacher. His older brother was Johannes Gruentzig. After his birth in Dresden, in 1940, the family moved to the house of a relative in the small town of
Rochlitz in western
Saxony. After the war, Charlotta and her sons moved to
Leipzig along with her sister Alfreda Beier and her mother. In 1950, Charlotta moved her family to
Buenos Aires, Argentina to live with her husband's brother and wife. Unhappy and homesick, Charlotta and her two sons moved back to Leipzig two years later. Gruentzig and his brother Johannes entered high school at the
Thomasschule zu Leipzig. Gruetzig graduated from the Thomasschule in 1957 with highest honors. In 1956, his brother Johannes fled across the border to
Hanover. Gruentzig followed a year later. Gruentzig studied at Bunsen Gymnasium while his brother enrolled as a medical student at
Heidelberg University. Gruentzig began his medical studies at Heidelberg University in the autumn of 1958, subsequently graduating on 8 April 1964. He then rotated through a series of internships in
Mannheim,
Hanover,
Bad Harzburg, and
Ludwigshafen. His studies included internal medicine and vascular surgery. In 1966, Gruentzig returned to Heidelberg University to take on a staff assistant job at the university's Institute for Social and Occupational Medicine, investigating risk factors for cardiovascular disease, chronic bronchitis, and liver degeneration. In 1967, he departed for a six-month paid fellowship to study epidemiology at the University of
London School of Hygiene. In 1968, he returned to Heidelberg. Early in 1968, he left for a six-month assistant doctor's job in
Darmstadt at the Max Ratschow Clinic. In November 1969, Gruentzig and his future wife Michaela moved to
Zürich where he worked in the department of Angiology at the
University Hospital of Zürich. ==Groundbreaking procedure: coronary angioplasty==