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  1. Philippe-Jean Pelletan (4 May 1747 – 26 September 1829) was a French surgeon born in Paris. Son of a surgeon, Pelletan was a member of the Académie Royale de Chirurgie and of the Académie des Sciences. He was a professor to the Faculté de Médecine de Paris, and in 1789 elected surgeon of the Garde Nationale.

  2. Philippe-Jean Pelletan né le 4 mai 1747 à Paris et mort le 26 septembre 1829 à Bourg-la-Reine [1] est un chirurgien français. Il eut une existence agitée, pleine de traverses et de vicissitudes.

    • 26 septembre 1829 (à 82 ans)Bourg-la-Reine
    • française
    • 5 mai 1747Paris
    • Cimetière de Bourg-la-Reine
  3. Apr 20, 2000 · The doctor who performed the autopsy, Philippe-Jean Pelletan, placed the dead child’s heart in a crystal vase filled with ethyl alcohol, and it stayed for 15 years on a shelf. It was stolen...

  4. Philippe Jean Pelletan (1747-1829) was the father of Pierre Pelletan (1782-1845), professor of natural philosophy, and Gabriel Pelletan (fl.1815-1880), physician and chemist. Finding aids. Database description transcribed from Richard Aspin and Christopher Hilton's typescript supplement to S.A.J Moorat's Catalogue of Western Manuscripts.

  5. Jul 26, 2018 · Following the unusual French tradition of preserving royal hearts, little Louis’ heart was sliced out by a surgeon the day after he died. It was smuggled around for years by the overseeing physician, Philippe-Jean Pelletan, who tried to keep the heart safe during the turbulent time of the French Revolution.

    • Jade Cuttle
    • Philippe-Jean Pelletan1
    • Philippe-Jean Pelletan2
    • Philippe-Jean Pelletan3
    • Philippe-Jean Pelletan4
  6. Philippe Jean Pelletan was born on May 4, 1747, in Paris, the son of a surgeon. He himself became a surgeon and a physician. Philippe Jean Pelletan died on September 26, 1829 in Bourg-la-Reine, and was buried in the cemetery of this town Philippe-Jean Pelletan.

  7. Sep 12, 2022 · Philippe-Jean Pelletan proceeded to perform a midline thyrotomy to remove a laryngeal piece. The first partial laryngectomy performed for a laryngeal cancer was reported in 1863 by Henry B. Sands (1830–1888), who was a faculty surgeon at New York University [ 6 ].