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  1. Jean-Martin Charcot (French:; 29 November 1825 – 16 August 1893) was a famous French neurologist and professor of anatomical pathology. He worked on groundbreaking work about hypnosis and hysteria, in particular with his hysteria patient Louise Augustine Gleizes.

  2. Jean-Martin Charcot (figure 1 ) was born in Paris, France in 1825 at a time when the field of Neurology had not been formally recognized as a distinct specialty. 2 He was a gifted painter who used his artistic abilities and strong visual memory to make associations about patterns of disease in the field of medicine and anatomy. 1 His father ...

  3. Jean-Martin Charcot (born Nov. 29, 1825, Paris, France—died Aug. 16, 1893, Morvan) was the founder (with Guillaume Duchenne) of modern neurology and one of France’s greatest medical teachers and clinicians. Charcot took his M.D. at the University of Paris in 1853 and three years later was appointed physician of the Central Hospital bureau.

  4. May 23, 2017 · Known as ‘le pere de la neurologie’, Professor Jean-Martin Charcot (Figure 1) is probably one of the most influential physicians in the history of modern medicine, leaving behind at least 13 eponymous diseases, one eponymous island, and students including Freud, Babinski, Janet, Tourette and Bouchard in his wake.

  5. May 21, 2018 · Charcot, Jean Martin (1825–93) French physician and founder of neurology. He made classical studies of hypnosis and hysteria, and taught Pierre Janet and Sigmund Freud. His work centred on discovering how behavioural symptoms of patients relate to neurological disorders.

  6. Jean-Martin Charcot (1825–1893), son of a Parisian craftsman, went on to a brilliant university career and worked his way to the top of the hospital hierarchy. Becoming a resident in 1858 at the women’s nursing home and asylum at La Salpêtrière Hospital, he returned there in 1868 as chief physician.

  7. Abstract. Jean-Martin Charcot (1825-1893) rightly is considered the father of both modern neurology and psychiatry in France and much beyond. While he never was interested in mental disease and what was called 'alienism' at the time, his career at La Salpêtrière Hospital over 30 years was mainly marked by the development of a huge group of ...

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