Théophile Alajouanine

Théophile Alajouanine (French: [teofil alaʒuanin]; 12 June 1890 2 May 1980) was a French neurologist.

Théophile Alajouanine was born in Verneix, Allier. He was a student of Joseph Jules Dejerine and a colleague of Georges Guillain and Charles Foix. He was a prolific writer on many topics but was particularly interested in aphasia.[1]

A great scholar and enthusiastic bibliophile, Alajouanine had privileged relationships with famous writers during his neurological and neuropsychological career. Fyodor Dostoevsky's biography and works provided him with a penetrating look into the world of epilepsy.[2]

The Laboratoire Théophile-Alajouanine, Centre hospitalier Côte-des-Neiges, Montréal is named after him.[3]

Associated eponyms

gollark: 7 bits/character, because I did only ASCII.
gollark: So I did 1.4 characters/second over... well, technically two lines, I wanted full duplex communication.
gollark: Well, I think redstone runs at 10Hz.
gollark: For single digital redstone lines or bundled cables?
gollark: It would take several... minutes? to send potatOS down a BundleNet link. But it's fast enough for simple textual messaging.

References

  1. Théophile A. J. Alajouanine @ Who Named It
  2. The art of Dostoevsky's falling sickness
  3. Théophile A. J. Alajouanine @ Who Named It
  4. Théophile A. J. Alajouanine @ Who Named It


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