- Sigismond Jaccoud
Sigismond Jaccoud was a
Swiss physician , bornNovember 29 ,1830 ,Geneva ;died 1913.Sigismond Jaccoud was born in 1830 in
Geneva , where he went toschool and waseducated inmusic and thescience ofliterature . In 1849 he went toParis to studymedicine - and supported himself in thatcity teachingmusic andliterature . He became "interne des hפpitaux" in 1855. After graduation in 1859 he specialised ininternal medicine and in 1860 defended hisdoctoral thesis , on thepathogenesis ofalbuminuria . In 1862 he became "medecin des hopitaux", in 1863 "professeur". In 1877 he was appointedprofessor of internalpathology at themedical faculty and member of the Academy.Jaccoud was a very famous and highly estimated lecturer at several of Paris' hospitals - L'Hפpital Saint-Antonie, l'Hפpital de la Charitי, l`Hפpital de la Lariboisiטre and l'Hפpital de la Pitiי. Following the death of Ernest-Charles Lasègue (1816-1883) in 1883, he was also made professor of internal medicine at the Pitiי hospital in Paris.
A Swiss, Jaccoud was a very popular lecturer in Paris' hospitals in the late 1800's. In 1883 he published a three-volume work on
pathology , comprising almost 3.000 pages. Inrheumatology , and partly incardiology , Jaccoud was probably best known for his 23. Lecture, which has been perpetuated in medical history because of its description of Jaccoud's syndrome. At the turn of the centuryrheumatic fever ravaged among children and youth, and the fact that there was, unlike today, no rationalpharmaceutical therapy available, interest concentrated on the natural course of the disease.As he published his lectures in book form, they are still available for study - covering an impressive variety of medical questions. On
tuberculosis , the greatest medical problem of the time, with its numerous complications, no less than ten lectures were needed.In his books he emphasised how he enjoyed thorough clinical examinations,
epidemiology , research and teaching.Jaccoud died in 1913, at the age of 83 years.
Jaccoud published numerous articles in "Dictionnaire de Medecin et de Chirurgie pratiques" of which he was co-publisher.
Terms
* Jaccoud's dissociated fever — fever with slow and irregular pulse in tuberculous meningitis of adults.
* Jaccoud's sign — prominence of theaorta in the suprasternal notch: an indication ofleukemia .:Dorland's Medical Dictionary (1938)
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