Pierre Bouchet

Pierre Bouchet
Born January 6, 1752
Lyon (France)
Died January 6, 1794 (aged 42)
Lyon (France)
Stroke
Citizenship  France
Fields Medicine, Surgery
Institutions Lyon Hôtel-Dieu
Academic advisors Pierre-Joseph Desault
Known for first in France to modify then use a knotted-string snare device to ligate and remove uterus and vagina polyps
Children Claude-Antoine Bouchet (fr)

Pierre Bouchet (January 6, 1752 - January 6, 1794) was a French physician born in Lyon.

Biography

He was trained in medicine in Paris as Pierre-Joseph Desault pupil then came home in Lyon Hôtel-Dieu where he became Head Surgeon.

He was the first in France to modify then use a knotted-string snare device to ligate and remove uterus and vagina polyps.[1]

He also practiced internal necrosis surgery and tibia drilling.

His son, Claude-Antoine Bouchet, was the first, in France, to ligate external iliac artery to cure groin aneurysm.[2]

Pierre Bouchet was told always kind and good-hearted, so that his fellow citizens held him in the highest regard and esteem.[1] He suffered a stroke and died under arrest[2] on 1794 physically and psychologically exhausted by the Revolutionary armies siege of Lyon after the Revolt of the city against the National Convention.

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 "Dictionnaire des sciences médicales. Biographie médicale. Tome 2" (pdf) (in French). Paris: Panckoucke,. 1820–1825. pp. 461–462. Retrieved 22 April 2013.
  2. 2.0 2.1 Louis-Auguste Rougier (1839). Eloge historique de Claude-Antoine Bouchet, ancien chirurgien-major de l'Hôtel-Dieu de Lyon: lu à la Société de médecine de Lyon, le 30 décembre 1839, par... Rougier. Impr. Louis Perrin. Retrieved 22 April 2013.