Adolphe-Marie Gubler, Date of Birth, Place of Birth, Date of Death

    

Adolphe-Marie Gubler

French physician and pharmacologist

Date of Birth: 05-Apr-1821

Place of Birth: Metz, Grand Est, France

Date of Death: 20-Apr-1879

Profession: physician, pharmacist, pharmacologist

Nationality: France

Zodiac Sign: Aries


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About Adolphe-Marie Gubler

  • Adolphe-Marie Gubler (5 April 1821 – 20 April 1879) was a French physician and pharmacologist born in Metz. Originally a student of botany, he began his medical studies in 1841 at Paris, where he was a pupil of Armand Trousseau (1801–1867).
  • In 1845 he became an interne des hĂ´pitaux, earning his doctorate in 1849.
  • Afterwards he worked as a physician at the HĂ´pital Beaujon, and in 1853 earned his agrĂ©gation with a thesis on cirrhosis of the liver.
  • In 1868 he was appointed professor of therapy to the medical faculty in Paris, maintaining this position until his death in 1879. Gubler made a number of contributions in the fields of medicine and pharmacology.
  • He is credited with being the first physician to differentiate between hemotogenous and hepatogenous icterus.
  • His name is associated with "Millard-Gubler syndrome", a condition characterized by softening of brain tissue that is caused by blockage of blood vessels of the pons.
  • The disease is named in conjunction with Auguste Louis Jules Millard (1830–1915), who initially described the disorder in 1855.
  • The eponymous "Gubler's line" is a line of superficial origin of the trigeminal nerve on the pons, a lesion below which results in the aforementioned Millard-Gubler syndrome. He was the author of many works on botany, clinical medicine, physiology and pharmacology, with several articles on the latter subject being published in the "Journal de thĂ©rapeutique".
  • Among his better written efforts was an 1856 treatise on hemiplegia titled De l'hĂ©miplĂ©gie alterne envisagĂ©e comme signe de lĂ©sion de la protubĂ©rance annulaire et comme preuve de la dĂ©cussation des nerfs faciaux, and a major publication involving pharmacopoeia called Commentaires thĂ©rapeutiques du codex medicamentarius, a book that was awarded the "Chaussier Prize" (Prix Chaussier, named after anatomist François Chaussier) by the AcadĂ©mie des sciences.Gubler was a founding member of the SociĂ©tĂ© de biologie, and in 1865 became a member of the AcadĂ©mie de mĂ©decine. While still an interne, he was asked by Dr.
  • Trousseau to serve as a traveling companion to a young man suffering from emotional distress.
  • While in Milan, Gubler was seriously wounded by a gunshot from his companion, forcing him to spend a year recuperating in Milan.

Read more at Wikipedia