René Le Fort (30 March 1869 – 30 March 1951) was a French surgeon from Lille remembered for creating a classification for fractures of the face. He was a nephew to surgeon Léon Clément Le Fort (1829-1893), who introduced a surgical operation for uterine prolapse.
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After earning his medical degree with a treatise titled Etude expérimental sur les fractures de la machoire supérieure, he served as a medical resident followed by work as a military surgeon for the French army hospital at Val-de-Grâce. In 1899 he began teaching classes at the medical university in Lille. At the outbreak of the First Balkan War (1912), he re-joined the army as a military physician. During World War I he received a commendation for bravery for his actions at the Battle of Dinant. He spent the last two years of the war in Versailles largely dealing with breast cancer and heart disease issues.
In 1919 he worked at the Hôpital des Invalides prior to returning to Lille the following year. Here he became a professor at the surgical department for pediatric surgery and orthopedics. He was also a volunteer at the sanatorium in Zuydcoote, where he researched treatments for bone tuberculosis. In 1936 he was awarded the Prix Laborie and elected president of the Société française de chirurgie et orthopédique. In 1937 he went into retirement, but during World War II returned to the University of Lille to replace former colleagues who were part of the war effort.
In 1901 René Le Fort published a treatise called concerning his experiments with maxillary fractures of the skull. To perform these experiments, Le Fort used the skulls of cadavers, and delivered blunt forces of varying degrees of magnitude, as well as from different directions. From these tests, he determined that predictable patterns of fractures are the result of certain types of injuries, and concluded that there are three predominant types of mid-face fractures.
In some instances, maxillary fractures are a combination of two or three Le Fort types. Although this system of classification is considered somewhat simplistic today, it is still widely used in medicine.