Désiré-Magloire Bourneville

Désiré-Magloire Bourneville (English: /bɔːrnˈvl/) (October 20, 1840 – May 28, 1909) was a French neurologist born in Garencières.

Désiré-Magloire Bourneville

Career

He studied medicine in Paris, and worked as interne des hôpitaux at the Salpêtrière, Bicêtre, Hôpital Saint-Louis and the Pitié. During the Franco-Prussian War, he served as both a surgeon and an assistant medical officer. From 1879 to 1905 he was a physician of pediatric services at Bicêtre. In Paris, he founded a day school for special instruction of children with mental disability.

In 1866, during a severe cholera epidemic in Amiens, he volunteered his services, and after the siege had passed, was presented with a gold watch as an expression of the city's gratitude. During the Paris Commune (1871), when revolutionaries wanted to execute their wounded enemies, Bourneville intervened and saved the prisoners' lives.

He was elected to the Paris city council in 1876 and to the French Parliament in 1883, where he served as a deputy until 1889.[1] In both positions he advocated reforms of the health system. As a politician, he spearheaded efforts to train professional, secular nurses to replace the religious sisters who staffed most of the nation's hospitals at the time.[2]

In 1880, he provided an early description of a multi-symptom disorder that was to become known as "Bourneville's syndrome", now known as tuberous sclerosis.[3] This genetic condition may lead to mental retardation, epilepsy, a disfiguring facial rash and benign tumors in the brain, heart, kidney and other organs. The condition was also studied by the British dermatologist, John James Pringle (1855-1922), leading some historical texts to refer to it as "Bourneville-Pringle disease".

Bourneville published works which stated that saints claiming to produce miracles or stigmata, and those claiming to be possessed were actually suffering from epilepsy or hysteria.[4][5]

Bourneville was skeptical of mystical and supernatural claims. Between 1882 and 1902, he published a series of volumes known as La Bibliothèque Diabolique, in these he re-evaluated historical cases of possession and witchcraft in favour for pathological explanations.[6]

Writings

gollark: All in accordance with my plan.
gollark: It would be great* if they did eventually get powerful enough and directed enough to cook unsuspecting passersby.
gollark: That's weirdly specific.
gollark: It was a very successful research program combining theorizing about the physics and doing experiments to test it.
gollark: You can't really tell when those would have entered use *anyway*.

See also

References

  1. Leonard, Jacques, La medecine entre les pourvoirs et les savoirs, 288; J Neurol (2000) 247:481.
  2. Schultheiss, Katrin, Bodies and Souls: Politics and the Professionalization of Nursing in France, 1880-1922 (2001).
  3. Brigo, Francesco; Lattanzi, Simona; Trinka, Eugen; Nardone, Raffaele; Bragazzi, Nicola L.; Ruggieri, Martino; Martini, Mariano; Walusinski, Olivier (14 September 2018). "First descriptions of tuberous sclerosis by Désiré‐Magloire Bourneville (1840–1909)". Neuropathology. 38 (6): 577–582. doi:10.1111/neup.12515. PMID 30215888.
  4. Porter, Dorothy; Porter; Roy. (1993). Doctors, Politics and Society: Historical Essays. Rodopi. pp. 120-121. ISBN 90-5183-510-8
  5. Hustvedt, Asti. (2011). Medical Muses: Hysteria in Nineteenth-Century Paris. Bloomsbury. p. 279. ISBN 978-1-4088-2235-7
  6. Lachapelle. Sofie (2011). Investigating the Supernatural: From Spiritism and Occultism to Psychical Research and Metapsychics in France, 1853–1931. Johns Hopkins University Press. p. 62. ISBN 978-1-4214-0013-6
  7. Bourneville-Pringle disease @ Who Named It
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