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Revision as of 08:06, 13 November 2010

Philippe Ricord
Born(1800-12-10)December 10, 1800
Baltimore
Died1889
NationalityFrench
AwardsMontyon prize
Scientific career
Fieldsphysician
man with knife and babies
Ricord caricatured by André Gill, 1867

Philippe Ricord (1800–1889) was a French physician.

Philippe Ricord was born December 10, 1800 in Baltimore. His father had escaped the French Revolution in 1790 from Marseille. He met French naturalist Charles Alexandre Lesueur, who took him back to Paris in 1820. He worked for Lesueur as curator of his specimens, and at hospitals such as Val-de-Grâce and Hôtel-Dieu de Paris. He studied under Guillaume Dupuytren, but fell out with him when Ricord he published an article pointing out a procedure Dupuytren claimed to have invented was already in use in America. He transferred to Pitié-Salpêtrière Hospital to study under Jacques Lisfranc de St. Martin. He graduated in medicine in 1826. After practicing in the provinces he returned in 1828 to the capital, and worked there as a surgeon, specializing in venereal diseases. Doctor Ricord was surgeon in chief to the hospital for venereal diseases and to the Hôpital du Midi. He won a worldwide reputation in his special field. For his suggestions on the cure of varicocele and on the operation of urethroplasty he received in 1842 one of the Montyon prizes.

In 1838, he proved John Hunters self-experiment wrong, thus showing that syphilis and gonorrhea are not the same disease. Ricord's chancre is the parchment-like initial lesion of syphilis.

In 1862 he was appointed physician in ordinary to Prince Napoleon. On October 26, 1869, he was named consulting surgeon to Napoleon III. For his services in the ambulance corps during the siege of Paris he was made Grand Officer of the Legion of Honor in 1871.

He was the brother of Jean Baptiste Ricord (1777–1837) who was a physician and naturalist in America. Jean Baptiste's son (Phillipe's nephew) took the name John Ricord, became a lawyer who practiced law in several notable cases while he traveled through the Republic of Texas, Oregon Territory, the Kingdom of Hawaii, and the California Gold Rush. John Ricord returned to live with Phillipe where he died in 1861. There seems to be a controversy as to whether Jean Alfred Fournier, student of Ricord, was actually his son-in-law

Works

  • De l'emploi du speculum (Paris, 1833)
  • De la blennorrhagie de la femme (1834)
  • Emploi de l'onguent mercuriel dans le traitement de l'eresipele (1836)
  • Monographie du chancre (1837)
  • Théorie sur la nature et le traite-ment de l'epididymite (1838)
  • Traite des maladies veneriennes (8 volumes, 1838; fourth edition, 1866; English translation, A Practical Lecture on Venereal Diseases, 1842; thirteenth edition, 1854)
  • De l'ophthalmie blennorrhagique (1842)
  • Clinique iconographique de l'hopital des veneriens (1842–1851)
  • De la syphilisation (1853)
  • Lettres sur la syphilis (1851; third edition, 1863; English translation, 1853)
  • Leçons sur le chancre (1858; second edition, 1860; English translation, 1859)

References

  1. Oriel, J D (December 1989). "Eminent venereologists. 3. Philippe Ricord" (PDF). Genitourinary medicine. 65 (6). England: 388–93. ISSN 0266-4348. PMC 1194410. PMID 2693336.
  2. New International Encyclopedia
  3. Wilson, James Grant; Fiske, John (1888). Appleton's cyclopædia of American biography. Vol. 5. p. 247. {{cite book}}: Unknown parameter |editors= ignored (|editor= suggested) (help)
  4. Andrew Forest Muir. "Ricord, John". The Handbook of Texas Online. Texas State Historical Association. Retrieved 2010-03-13.
  5. Alex Dracobly. "The Myth of Philippe Ricord's Son-in-Law". Retrieved 2010-03-13.

Further reading

External links

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