Traité de pathologie interne. Appendice aux quatre premières éditions

Sigismond Jaccoud

Published by Paris, V.A. Delahaye, 1877
Used Couverture rigide

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Grand in-8° relié demi-chagrin de l'époque, 384 pages. François Sigismond Jaccoud (1830-1913), médecin né à Genève, naturalisé français en 1862. Il est nommé professeur de Pathologie interne en 1877. Il a traduit la Clinique Médicale de Graves et dirigé le Nouveau Dictionnaire de médecine et de chirurgie pratiques (Sources : La Grande Encyclopédie de Berthelot, Tome 20, page 1155). Parmi ses nombreux écrits, son traité de Pathologie Interne fut, vu le nombre de rééditions successives, son plus important écrit - - - Sigismond Jaccoud (20 November 1830 - 26 April 1913) was a Swiss physician. Sigismond Jaccoud was born in 1830 in Geneva, where he went to school and was educated in music and the science of literature. In 1849 he went to Paris to study medicine - and supported himself in that city teaching music and literature. He became interne des h?pitaux in 1855. After graduation in 1859 he specialised in internal medicine and in 1860 defended his doctoral thesis, on the pathogenesis of albuminuria. In 1862 he became medecin des hopitaux, in 1863 professeur. In 1877 he was appointed professor of internal pathology at the medical faculty and member of the Académie Nationale de Médecine. In 1898 he became president of the Academy. Jaccoud was a very famous and highly estimated lecturer at several of Paris' hospitals - L'Hôpital Saint-Antoine, l'Hôpital de la Charité, l'Hôpital Lariboisière and l'Hôpital de la Pitié-Salpétrière. Following the death of Ernest-Charles Lasègue (1816-1883) in 1883, he was also made professor of internal medicine at the Pitié hospital in Paris. In 1883 he published a three-volume work on pathology, comprising almost 3.000 pages. In rheumatology, and partly in cardiology, Jaccoud was probably best known for his 23. Lecture, which has been perpetuated in medical history because of its description of Jaccoud's syndrome. At the turn of the 20th century rheumatic fever ravaged among children and youth, and the fact that there was, unlike today, no rational pharmaceutical therapy available, interest concentrated on the natural course of the disease. As he published his lectures in book form, they are still available for study - covering an impressive variety of medical questions. On tuberculosis, the greatest medical problem of the time, with its numerous complications, no less than ten lectures were needed. In his books he emphasised how he enjoyed thorough clinical examinations, epidemiology, research and teaching. Jaccoud died in 1913, at the age of 83 years. Jaccoud published numerous articles in Dictionnaire de Médecine et de Chirurgie pratiques of which he was co-publisher. Seller Inventory # oli3407

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Title: Traité de pathologie interne. Appendice aux ...
Publisher: Paris, V.A. Delahaye
Publication Date: 1877
Binding: Couverture rigide
Condition: Très bon

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Sigismond Jaccoud
Published by Paris, V.A. Delahaye, 1877
Used Hardcover

Seller: PRISCA, Paris, France

Seller rating 4 out of 5 stars 4-star rating, Learn more about seller ratings

Couverture rigide. Condition: Très bon. Grand in-8° relié demi-chagrin de l'époque, 384 pages. François Sigismond Jaccoud (1830-1913), médecin né à Genève, naturalisé français en 1862. Il est nommé professeur de Pathologie interne en 1877. Il a traduit la Clinique Médicale de Graves et dirigé le Nouveau Dictionnaire de médecine et de chirurgie pratiques (Sources : La Grande Encyclopédie de Berthelot, Tome 20, page 1155). Parmi ses nombreux écrits, son traité de Pathologie Interne fut, vu le nombre de rééditions successives, son plus important écrit - - - Sigismond Jaccoud (20 November 1830 - 26 April 1913) was a Swiss physician. Sigismond Jaccoud was born in 1830 in Geneva, where he went to school and was educated in music and the science of literature. In 1849 he went to Paris to study medicine - and supported himself in that city teaching music and literature. He became interne des h?pitaux in 1855. After graduation in 1859 he specialised in internal medicine and in 1860 defended his doctoral thesis, on the pathogenesis of albuminuria. In 1862 he became medecin des hopitaux, in 1863 professeur. In 1877 he was appointed professor of internal pathology at the medical faculty and member of the Académie Nationale de Médecine. In 1898 he became president of the Academy. Jaccoud was a very famous and highly estimated lecturer at several of Paris' hospitals - L'Hôpital Saint-Antoine, l'Hôpital de la Charité, l'Hôpital Lariboisière and l'Hôpital de la Pitié-Salpétrière. Following the death of Ernest-Charles Lasègue (1816-1883) in 1883, he was also made professor of internal medicine at the Pitié hospital in Paris. In 1883 he published a three-volume work on pathology, comprising almost 3.000 pages. In rheumatology, and partly in cardiology, Jaccoud was probably best known for his 23. Lecture, which has been perpetuated in medical history because of its description of Jaccoud's syndrome. At the turn of the 20th century rheumatic fever ravaged among children and youth, and the fact that there was, unlike today, no rational pharmaceutical therapy available, interest concentrated on the natural course of the disease. As he published his lectures in book form, they are still available for study - covering an impressive variety of medical questions. On tuberculosis, the greatest medical problem of the time, with its numerous complications, no less than ten lectures were needed. In his books he emphasised how he enjoyed thorough clinical examinations, epidemiology, research and teaching. Jaccoud died in 1913, at the age of 83 years. Jaccoud published numerous articles in Dictionnaire de Médecine et de Chirurgie pratiques of which he was co-publisher. Seller Inventory # oli3407

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