Pierre Bouchet | |
---|---|
Born |
Lyon (France) |
6 January 1752
Died | 6 January 1794 Lyon (France) |
(aged 42)
Cause of death | Stroke |
Citizenship | France |
Known for | first in France to modify then use a knotted-string snare device to ligate and remove uterus and vagina polyps |
Children | Claude-Antoine Bouchet () |
Scientific career | |
Fields | Medicine, Surgery |
Institutions | Lyon Hôtel-Dieu |
Academic advisors | Pierre-Joseph Desault |
Pierre Bouchet (6 January 1752 – 6 January 1794) was a French physician born in Lyon.
He was trained in medicine in Paris as Pierre-Joseph Desault pupil then came home in Lyon Hôtel-Dieu where he became Head Surgeon.
He was the first in France to modify then use a knotted-string snare device to ligate and remove uterus and vagina polyps.
He also practiced internal necrosis surgery and tibia drilling.
His son, Claude-Antoine Bouchet, was the first, in France, to ligate external iliac artery to cure groin aneurysm.
Pierre Bouchet was always kind and good-hearted, so that his fellow citizens held him in the highest regard and esteem. He suffered a stroke and died under arrest on 1794 physically and psychologically exhausted by the Revolutionary armies siege of Lyon after the Revolt of the city against the National Convention.