Childhood and private life Rastelli was born in
Pescara on 25 June 1933. His father, Vito Rastelli, was a journalist; his mother, Bianchi Luisa, was a primary school teacher. He had a younger sister, Rosangela, who would be an English teacher and social worker. He was interested in medicine from a young age. Rastelli met with the Gesuit Padre Molin Mosè when he was 12 years old. On 10 August 1964, he married Anna Anghileri of Sondrio, who had met while skiing in
Bormio. In 1965 his daughter Antonella Rastelli was born; she is now a doctor.
Entrance into medicine He attended the
University of Parma and started going to the hospital during his third year; he graduated
cum laude in medicine and surgery in 1957, and immediately started working for free in the surgical clinic of Parma. In 1958, he obtained medical licence with full marks; then he was an intern at the Hospital of Parma up to 1961.
American period On 7 September 1961, Rastelli won a
NATO scholarship at the
Mayo Clinic in
Rochester,
Minnesota. There he learnt cardiology with a brand-new approach due to the teachings of
Jeremy Swan and
John W. Kirklin. His two surgical techniques, Rastelli 1 and Rastelli 2, have been fundamental in the classification of both
truncus arteriosus and
transposition of the great vessels. He never left Italy, and paid for children's travel and hosted them in his house near the Clinic; sometimes to save money he used to season salad with hard-boiled eggs (a low price source of proteins). The next years saw children coming from Parma – and other countries – to Rochester in order to be assisted. The first child to be operated by Rastelli was a four-year-old boy named Paolo Ravesi, who was affected by
atrioventricular canal (partial type) and who had undergone surgery in Italy without success. In 1968 Rastelli operated on his second patient, the son of one of his colleagues in Parma, Pietro Maniscalco; since birth he had suffered from
coarctation of the aorta, a condition thought to be inoperable in Italy. also known as the Rastelli 1 procedure. On 19 December 1969, Paolo Frugoni, a six-year-old boy with TGV, came to
Mayo Clinic in search of medical assistance. Despite his poor health, Rastelli wanted to assist the surgeon at all costs during the surgery; the operation was a success and this was to be the last one at which Rastelli assisted before his death three weeks afterward. Children and their families would cross the ocean to seek treatment by him; he used to visit children for free in Italy and then he would make sure they could face the overseas journey at the
Mayo Clinic. == Rastelli techniques ==