Literature DB >> 3304599

Why does cirrhosis belong to Laennec?

J M Duffin.   

Abstract

It is well known that Laennec gave cirrhosis its name from the Greek word kirrhos (tawny), in a brief footnote to his treatise De l'auscultation médiate (1819), but the eponym "Laennec's cirrhosis" is rarely used in France. This article explores the reasons why North American physicians commemorate a French chest specialist in their name for a hepatic lesion that had first been recognized in England more than a century earlier. It traces the content and fortunes of Laennec's essay on cirrhosis, part of an incomplete manuscript, including its eventual partial publication by a British editor in the original French. A survey of 19th-century literature on cirrhosis revealed that it was not until the publication of William Osler's textbook that the eponym came into common use. The geographic patterns of influence of Osler's book and the differing preoccupations of physicians on the two sides of the English Channel probably combined to result in the paradoxic employment of this eponym.

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Year:  1987        PMID: 3304599      PMCID: PMC1492806     

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  CMAJ        ISSN: 0820-3946            Impact factor:   8.262


  1 in total

1.  Sir William Osler and French medicine.

Authors:  C Coury
Journal:  Med Hist       Date:  1967-01       Impact factor: 1.419

  1 in total
  1 in total

1.  President's address: R.T.H. Laënnec, M.D.--clinicopathologic observations, using the stethoscope, made chest medicine more scientific.

Authors:  Herbert Y Reynolds
Journal:  Trans Am Clin Climatol Assoc       Date:  2004
  1 in total

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