Émile Vidal
Jean Baptiste Émile Vidal (18 June 1825 – 16 June 1893) was a French dermatologist who was a native of Paris.[1][2]
He studied medicine in Tours and Paris, becoming médecin des hôpitaux in 1862. For much of his career he was associated with the Hôpital Saint-Louis (1867–1890) in Paris. In 1883 he became a member of the Académie de Médecine.
He is remembered for his investigations of lupus and skin lichenification. His name is associated with "pityriasis circinata et marginata of Vidal", a disorder that is synonymous to pityriasis rosea,[3] and "Vidal's disease", an historical name for lichen simplex chronicus.[4]
Publications
- Considérations sur le rhumatisme articulaire chronique primitif, 1855
- Du Pityriasis, 1877
- Inoculabilité de quelques affections cutanées, 1877
- Du pityriasis circiné et marginé, 1882
- Étude sur le mycosis fongoïde with L .Brocq, Paris : A. Delahaye et E. Lecrosnier, 1885
- Acne molluscum contagiosum" généralisée ; acné varioliforme (de Bazin) généralisée, 1889.[5]
Notes
- ↑ Quelques cas historiques en dermatologie - Page 43 2011 "Il va ensuite devenir l' interne d'Émile Vidal (1825-1993), son premier maître en dermatologie. Inspiré par Vidal qui oriente sa carrière, Brocq soutient sa thèse de médecine en 1882 "
- ↑ Dermatologie des XIX et XXe siècles: Mutations et controverses - Page 261 Gérard Tilles - 2011 "Emile Vidal fut l'un des premiers en France à souligner l'intérêt de l' anatomopathologie en dermatologie : « Tous ses élèves connaissaient la fameuse armoire aux préparations de son laboratoire, armoire remplie de boîtes soigneusement ..."
- ↑ Pityriasis rosea - An update Chuh A, Lee A, Zawar V, Sciallis G.
- ↑ Mondofacto Dictionary Vidal's disease
- ↑ IDREF.fr (bibliography)
References
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