I would like to share with you all, family and friends of Tony Cheung the e-mail accolades sent by his colleagues in the Department of Pathology at UC Davis where Tony spent many of his later very productive years. Tony was a remarkable individual, an inspired scientist and a wonderful colleague. It was a pleasure and privilege to work and collaborate with him
-Ralph Green Distinguished Professor of Pathology, Department of Pathology and Laboratory Medicine(former chair, Department of Pathology, UC Davis)
Here are the tributes from his colleagues in the Department:
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From: Theodore Wun <twun@health.ucdavis.edu>
Sent: Monday, December 29, 2025 10:00:29 AM
Subject: Re: Tony Cheung - a special colleague and friend
Dear Ralph,
Thank you for letting me know the sad news. I did not see him much after his retirement. Always a bundle of energy.
Best in the new year to you and yours, too.
-ted
Subject: Fw: Tony Cheung - a special colleague and friend
Hi Ted,
I thought that you would want to know about Tony' s passing and the various tributes from his colleagues.
Ralph
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From: Paul A Luciw <paluciw@ucdavis.edu>
Sent: Saturday, December 27, 2025 10:52 PM
To: Ralph Green <rgreen@health.ucdavis.edu>
Subject: Tony Cheung - a special colleague and friend
Tony was very collegial, a careful listener, and ready to offer thoughtful suggestions (and encouragement if needed). As Bob pointed out, Tony had remarkable academic and extracurricular accomplishments – importantly, he always displayed a humble, friendly, and helpful nature.
Paul Luciw, PhD.
Emeritus Professor
Dept of Pathology and Laboratory Medicine
UC Davis
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From: Robert D Cardiff <rdcardiff@ucdavis.edu>
Sent: Saturday, December 27, 2025 4:49 PM
Subject: Re: Some sad news
Thank you for sharing the news about Tony Cheung. Tony was an inventive enthusiast. His studies on microvasculature were ahead of the times but his thinking was also too far advanced for the times. I recall that he used "leaky vessels" to diagnose incipient diabetes in living people. We had a visiting scholar from Xian, China who took part in Tony's studies. Tony found leaky vessels and told the scholar that he had diabetes. The visitor denied it. Two months later our visitor was in the hospital in diabetic coma. Tony had the technology but was too far ahead of medicine to cash in.
As intimated by Ralph, Tony was always an enthusiastic contributor to many other of our projects.
Tony was also a contributor to the initiation of our Informatics efforts. He was able to get into the California Death Registry. He searched for deaths due to breast cancer. Most memorable, he discovered that the state was not editing/auditing the records. For example, a woman with breast cancer was recorded as living at the age of 150 years. Our Mike Hogarth eventually got the contract to create a new registry.
On our second trip to mainland China, Tony was one on three Chinese faculty members I took with me. Tony was ebullient and a gracious guide for our trip. He made it memorable.
It turned out that he was a Ping Pong Olympian representing Hong Kong. And. a well-known horseman and a member of the Hong Kong Polo Club. He took us to his childhood home which was on the upper level of Victoria Peak! He was born on the Chinese mainland and led us on a tour to the small hospital where he was born. So many memories. He was one of a kind. In many ways he was one of the many Unsung Hero's of UCD who made it a great place to be. He will be missed.
rdc
Robert D. Cardiff, MD, PhD
Distinguished Professor of Pathology, Emeritus
Department of Pathology and Laboratory Medicine
School of Medicine
University of California, Davis
Davis California 95616
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From: Lydia P Howell <lphowell@ucdavis.edu>
Sent: Saturday, December 27, 2025 1:57 PM
To: Ralph Green (UCD Health) <rgreen@health.ucdavis.edu>; Robert D Cardiff <rdcardiff@ucdavis.edu>
Ralph:
I’m so sorry to learn about Tony Cheung – thanks for informing us. As you describe, Tony was a very upbeat person who helped create a positive atmosphere in the department for all. His research brought interesting new technology into the department that allowed us to view disease in a novel way. My husband worked with Tony’s wife – she was the hospital administrator in charge of the orthopedic service line in the Mercy system here in Sacramento before going on to even bigger roles in the Bay Area – so of course, Steve will also be interested in knowing about this sad loss.
As we Greeks say – may Tony’s memory be eternal!
Lydia Pleotis Howell MD
Deputy Director
Association for Academic Pathology
lhowell@academicpathology.org
Distinguished Professor Emerita and Chair Emerita
Department of Pathology & Laboratory Medicine
University of California, Davis School of Medicine
lphowell@ucdavis.edu
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Subject: Some sad news
Dear Bob,
I share with you the sad news that Tony Cheung has left us. Joshua Miller, who was still collaborating with Tony from afar, contacted me this morning to let me know that Tony's surgery for a gallbladder tumor had not gone well. He suffered postoperative complications and succumbed.
I know that you were instrumental in recognizing Tony's skill and promise and it was you who brought him into our fold. I appointed him as our vice chair for research for a time and enjoyed collaborations with him. He brought his skills and training at Caltech as an engineer to solve problems in biology.
(I add as a footnote That Josh is planning a sabbatical next year and would like to come back here to Davis to complete some unfinished symphonies, including works that he and I had carried out with Tony relating to the connections between the microvasculature, intermediary, metabolism and cognition)
With my warm regards,
Ralph