Joseph Honoré Simon Beau Explained

Joseph Honoré Simon Beau (8 May 1806 in Collonges, department of Ain  - 11 August 1865) was a French physician, who is famous for his investigations of the physiology of the heart and the lungs.

In 1836 he obtained his doctorate in Paris with the thesis De l’emploi des évacuants, etc. From 1840 he was an assigned as a physician to the "Bureau central", earning his agrégation several years later (1844). In July 1856 he became a member of the Académie Nationale de Médecine.

He was a leading advocate of pathological physiology. Treatises involving his studies of the heart and lungs were initially published in the Archives générales de médecine (1834 to 1845), and compiled in his Traité expérimental et clinique d'auscultation appliqué à l'étude des maladies du poumon et du coeur (1856).[1]

Selected writings

See also

Notes and References

  1. http://www.whonamedit.com/person_bibliography/781/ Bibliography of Joseph Honoré Simon Beau
  2. http://cths.fr/an/prosopo.php?id=105404 Sociétés savantes
  3. http://www.whonamedit.com/synd.cfm/1211.html Beau's lines
  4. http://www.whonamedit.com/synd.cfm/745.html Beau's syndrome