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Paul Segond

Paul Ferdinand Segond
Paul Segond
Paul Segond
Born 8 May 1851
Paris
Died 27 October 1912(1912-10-27) (aged 61)
Paris
Education Faculté de médecine de Paris of the University of Paris
Years active 1875–1912
Known for Segond fracture, vaginal hysterectomy
Relatives Son-in-law of Juliette Adam
Father-in-law of Ernest Fourneau
Grandfather of Jean-Claude Fourneau
Medical career
Profession Surgeon
Institutions Hôpitaux de Paris
Académie Nationale de Médecine
Société de chirurgie de Paris
Pitié-Salpêtrière Hospital
Specialism Obstetrics and gynaecology, Knee surgery

Paul Ferdinand Segond (8 May 1851 in Paris – 27 October 1912 in Paris) was a French surgeon who was a founder of obstetrics and the teaching of gynaecology in Paris. He was also an expert on the knee and described the eponymous Segond fracture.

Paul Segond was born in Paris, the son of anatomist Louis-Auguste Segond (1819–1908). He studied medicine in Paris, becoming an intern in 1875, having already published a letter on "weight of newborns" in the Annales de gynécologie. He became prosector at the Faculté de médecine de Paris of the University of Paris in 1878. He qualified docteur en médecine in 1880, with his thesis on Abcès chauds de la prostate et le phlegmon périprostatique (hot abscesses of the prostate and periprostatic phlegmon) being honoured by the Société de Chirurgie and French Academy of Sciences.

He became an associate professor of surgery in 1883, and was made chef de clinique at Pitié-Salpêtrière Hospital alongside Ulysse Trélat later in the same year. In 1905 he succeeded Paul Jules Tillaux in the chair of surgery at the Faculté de médecine de Paris, a position which he held until his death. In 1909 he was elected as a member of the French Académie Nationale de Médecine.

In the early part of his career, Segond's contributions concerned the urinary system with publications including his work on prostatic abscess. Subsequently he turned his attention to gynaecological surgery, and in particular influenced by the work of Jules-Émile Péan he perfected the technique of hysterectomy by the vaginal approach; he also used this approach to remove cancers and perform myomectomies. Treatment of uterine or periuterine infection by vaginal hysterectomy became known as the Péan–Segond operation ( (French)).


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