Template:Short description Template:Use dmy dates Template:Infobox scientist Template:Hypnosis Jean-Martin Charcot ({{#invoke:IPA|main}}; 29 November 1825 – 16 August 1893) was a French neurologist and professor of anatomical pathology.<ref name=WhoNamedCharcot>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> He worked on groundbreaking work about hypnosis and hysteria, in particular with his hysteria patient Louise Augustine Gleizes.<ref name="Louise">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> Charcot is known as "the founder of modern neurology",<ref name=Lamberty5>Lamberty (2007), p. 5</ref> and his name has been associated with at least 15 medical eponyms, including various conditions sometimes referred to as Charcot diseases.<ref name=WhoNamedCharcot/>
Charcot has been referred to as "the father of French neurology and one of the world's pioneers of neurology".<ref name= Teive>Template:Cite journal</ref> His work greatly influenced the developing fields of neurology and psychology; modern psychiatry owes much to the work of Charcot and his direct followers.<ref name=FollowingCharcotp7>Bogousslavsky (2010), p. 7</ref> He was the "foremost neurologist of late nineteenth-century France"<ref name=Kushner11/> and has been called "the Napoleon of the neuroses".<ref name= Odyssey>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>
Personal lifeEdit
Born in Paris, Charcot worked and taught at the famous Salpêtrière Hospital for 33 years. His reputation as an instructor drew students from all over Europe.<ref name=Odyssey/> In 1882, he established a neurology clinic at Salpêtrière, which was the first of its kind in Europe.<ref name=WhoNamedCharcot/> Charcot was a part of the French neurological tradition and studied under, and greatly revered, Duchenne de Boulogne.<ref name=CharcotDuchenne>Template:Cite journal</ref><ref name= CharcotCharcot>Template:Cite journal</ref>
"He married a rich widow, Madame Durvis, in 1864 and had three children, Jeanne, Jean-Paul and Jean-Baptiste, who later became a doctor and a famous polar explorer".<ref name=ShapedNeurology>Template:Cite journal</ref>
He has been described as an atheist.<ref>Kugelmann, Robert. Psychology and Catholicism: Contested Boundaries. Cambridge: Cambridge UP, 2011. Print.</ref>
CareerEdit
NeurologyEdit
Charcot's primary focus was neurology. He named and was the first to describe multiple sclerosis.<ref name=WhoNamedCharcot/><ref name=Charcot1>Template:Cite journal</ref> Summarizing previous reports and adding his own clinical and pathological observations, Charcot called the disease sclérose en plaques. The three signs of multiple sclerosis now known as Charcot's triad 1 are nystagmus, intention tremor, and telegraphic speech, though these are not unique to MS. Charcot also observed cognition changes, describing his patients as having a "marked enfeeblement of the memory" and "conceptions that formed slowly". He was also the first to describe a disorder known as Charcot joint or Charcot arthropathy, a degeneration of joint surfaces resulting from loss of proprioception. He researched the functions of different parts of the brain and the role of arteries in cerebral hemorrhage.<ref name=WhoNamedCharcot/>
Charcot was among the first to describe Charcot–Marie–Tooth disease (CMT). The announcement was made simultaneously with Pierre Marie of France (his resident) and Howard Henry Tooth of England. The disease is also sometimes called peroneal muscular atrophy.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>
Charcot's studies between 1868 and 1881 were a landmark in the understanding of Parkinson's disease.<ref name="pmid18175393"/> Among other advances he made the distinction between rigidity, weakness and bradykinesia.<ref name="pmid18175393"/> He also led the disease formerly named paralysis agitans (shaking palsy) to be renamed after James Parkinson.<ref name="pmid18175393">Template:Cite journal</ref> He also noted apparent variations on PD, such as Parkinson's disease with hyperextension.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> Charcot received the first European professional chair of clinical diseases for the nervous system in 1882.<ref name=Jeste2007>Jeste (2007) p. 4</ref>
Studies on hypnosis and hysteriaEdit
Charcot is best known today for his work on hypnosis and hysteria. In particular, he is best remembered for his work with his hysteria patient Louise Augustine Gleizes, who somewhat increased his fame during his lifetime; however, Marie "Blanche" Wittmann, known as the Queen of Hysterics, was his most famous hysteria patient at the time.<ref name="io9">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref><ref name="blanche">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref><ref name="Louise"/> He initially believed that hysteria was a neurological disorder for which patients were pre-disposed by hereditary features of their nervous system,<ref name=Odyssey/><ref name=Charcot85>Charcot (1889), p. 85</ref> but near the end of his life he concluded that hysteria was a psychological disease.<ref name=FollowingCharcotp108>Bogousslavsky (2010), p. 108</ref>
Charcot first began studying hysteria after creating a special ward for non-insane females with "hystero-epilepsy". He discovered two distinct forms of hysteria among these women: minor hysteria and major hysteria.<ref>Shorter (1997), p. 134</ref> His interest in hysteria and hypnotism "developed at a time when the general public was fascinated in 'animal magnetism' and 'mesmerizationTemplate:Single double,<ref name=CrimeHysteria/> which was later revealed to be a method of inducing hypnosis.<ref name=Plotnik2012p170>Plotnik (2012) p. 170.</ref> His study of hysteria "attract[ed] both scientific and social notoriety".<ref name=Goetz211>Goetz (1995), p. 211</ref> Bogousslavsky, Walusinski, and Veyrunes write:
Charcot and his school considered the ability to be hypnotized as a clinical feature of hysteria ... For the members of the Salpêtrière School, susceptibility to hypnotism was synonymous with disease, i.e. hysteria, although they later recognized ... that grand hypnotisme (in hysterics) should be differentiated from petit hypnotisme, which corresponded to the hypnosis of ordinary people.<ref name="CrimeHysteria">Template:Cite journal</ref>
Charcot argued vehemently against the widespread medical and popular prejudice that hysteria was rarely found in men, presenting several cases of traumatic male hysteria.<ref name=FollowingCharcotp203>Bogousslavsky (2010), p. 203</ref> He taught that due to this prejudice these "cases often went unrecognised, even by distinguished doctors"<ref>Goetz (1987), p. 116</ref> and could occur in such models of masculinity as railway engineers or soldiers. Charcot's analysis, in particular his view of hysteria as an organic condition which could be caused by trauma, paved the way for understanding neurological symptoms arising from industrial-accident or war-related traumas.<ref>Goetz (1987), p. 117</ref>
The Salpêtrière School's position on hypnosis was sharply criticized by Hippolyte Bernheim, another leading neurologist of the time.<ref name=CrimeHysteria/> Bernheim argued that the hypnosis and hysteria phenomena that Charcot had famously demonstrated were in fact due to suggestion. However, Charcot himself had had longstanding concerns about the use of hypnosis in treatment and about its effect on patients. He also was concerned that the sensationalism hypnosis attracted had robbed it of its scientific interest,<ref name=Goetz211/> and that the quarrel with Bernheim, amplified by Charcot's pupil Georges Gilles de la Tourette, had "damaged" hypnotism.<ref name=CrimeHysteria/>
ArtsEdit
Charcot thought of art as a crucial tool of the clinicoanatomic method. He used photos and drawings, many made by himself or his students, in his classes and conferences. He also drew outside the neurology domain, as a personal hobby. Like Duchenne, he is considered a key figure in the incorporation of photography to the study of neurological cases.<ref name="pmid2012518">Template:Cite journal</ref>
Distorted views of CharcotEdit
Distorted views of Charcot as harsh and tyrannical have arisen from some sources that rely on a fanciful autobiographical novel by Axel Munthe, The Story of San Michele (1929). Munthe claimed to have been Charcot's assistant, but in fact, Munthe was just a medical student among hundreds of others. Munthe's most direct contact with Charcot was when Munthe helped a young female patient "escape" from a ward of the hospital and took her into his home. Charcot threatened to report this to the police, and ordered that Munthe not be allowed on the wards of the hospital again.<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref>
In a 1931 letter to The New York Times Book Review, Charcot's son Jean-Baptiste Charcot, who had, himself, been a formal student of his father at the Salpêtrière, emphatically stated:
"I can certify that Dr Munthe never was trained by my father"; and, further, that "[although Munthe] may have [incidentally] followed, like hundreds of others, some courses of Charcot, ...he was not trained by him and certainly never had the intimacy of which he boasts [in his recently reviewed work, Memories and Vagaries]. ...I was, myself, a student at the Salpetriere then, and can certify that he was not one of his students and that my father never knew him. Everything he says about professor Charcot is false...."<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>
Bengt Jangfeldt, in his 2008 biography, Axel Munthe: The Road to San Michele, states that "Charcot is not mentioned in a single letter of Axel's out of the hundreds that have been preserved from his Paris years" (p. 96).<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>
LegacyEdit
One of Charcot's greatest legacies as a clinician is his contribution to the development of systematic neurological examination, correlating a set of clinical signs with specific lesions. This was made possible by his pioneering long-term studies of patients, coupled with microscopic and anatomic analysis derived from eventual autopsies.<ref>Goetz (1995), p. 103</ref> This led to the first clear delineation of various neurological diseases and classic description of them, such as amyotrophic lateral sclerosis.<ref>See:
- Charcot, J. M. (1874) "De la sclérose latérale amyotrophique," Le Progrès médical, series 1, 2 : 325-327, 341-342, 453-455.
- Jean Martin Charcot with Désiré Magloire Bourneville, ed., Oeuvres complètes de J.M. Charcot (Complete works of J.M. Charcot), (Paris, France: Fèlix Alcan, 1894), volume 2, "Douzième Leçon: Amyotrophies spinales deutéropathiques, — Sclérose latérale amyotrophique." (Twelfth lesson: Deuteropathic spinal amyotrophies — amyotrophic lateral sclerosis), pp. 234-248; "Treizième Leçon: De la sclérose latérale amyotrophique. Symptomatologie." (Thirteenth lesson: On amyotrophic lateral sclerosis. Symptomology), pp. 249-266.</ref>
Charcot is just as famous for his influence on those who had studied with him: Sigmund Freud,<ref name=Odyssey/> Joseph Babinski,<ref name=WhoNamedCharcot/> Jean Leguirec,<ref name=Odyssey/> Pierre Janet,<ref name=Odyssey/> William James, Pierre Marie, Albert Londe, Charles-Joseph Bouchard,<ref name=WhoNamedCharcot/> Georges Gilles de la Tourette,<ref name=WhoNamedCharcot/> Alfred Binet,<ref name=Odyssey/> and Albert Pitres. Among the doctors trained by Charcot at the beginning of the 20th century account the Spanish neuropathologists Nicolás Achúcarro and Gonzalo Rodríguez Lafora, two distinguished disciples of Santiago Ramón y Cajal and members of the Spanish Neurological School.
Charcot bestowed the eponym for Tourette syndrome in honor of his student, Georges Gilles de la Tourette.<ref name="Kushner11">Kushner (2000), p. 11</ref><ref>Black, KJ (22 March 2006). Tourette Syndrome and Other Tic Disorders. eMedicine. Retrieved on 27 June 2006.
* Enerson, Ole Daniel. Georges Albert Édouard Brutus Gilles de la Tourette. Who Named It? Retrieved on 28 June 2006.</ref>
Although, by the 1870s, Charcot was France's best known physician, his ideas about hysteria were later refuted, and French psychiatry did not recover for decades. An example of the dismissal of Charcot's views can be found in Edward Shorter's History of Psychiatry: Shorter states that Charcot understood "almost nothing" about major psychiatric illness, and that he was "quite lacking in common sense and grandiosely sure of his own judgement". This perspective overlooks the fact that Charcot never claimed to be a psychiatrist or to be practising psychiatry, a field that was separately organized from neurology within France's educational and public health systems.<ref>Goetz (1995), p. 208</ref> After Charcot's death, the phenomenon of "hysteria" that he had described was no longer recognized as a real neurological condition, but was considered to be an "artifact of suggestion".<ref>Shorter (1997), pp. 84–86</ref> However, Charcot continued to have a "prominent" position in French psychiatry and psychology.<ref name=Gardner145>Gardner (1999), p. 145</ref>
The negative evaluation of Charcot's work on hysteria was influenced by a significant shift in diagnostic criteria and understanding of hysteria which occurred in the decades following his death.<ref>Goetz (1987), p. 115</ref> The historical perspective on Charcot's work on hysteria has also been distorted by viewing him as a precursor of Freud.Template:Citation needed After Charcot's death, Freud and Janet wrote articles on his importance.<ref name=FollowingCharcotp120>Bogousslavsky (2010), p. 120</ref> However, Charcot's work on hysteria and hypnotism was at odds with the perspective Freud made famous, since Charcot believed in neurological determinism.
The Charcot-Janet school, which formed from the work of Charcot and his student Janet, contributed greatly to knowledge of multiple personality disorders.<ref name=GardnerM389>Gardner (1999), p. 389</ref><ref>The Charcot-Janet school was later extended by Morton Prince in his book on Dissociation of a Personality (1905),</ref>
Influence on the development of anti-SemitismEdit
Charcot claimed to have observed a higher prevalence of diseases with a hereditary component (notably arthritis and neurological disorders) in Jewish communities, where limited numbers combined with longterm endogamy. He also used Jewish patients as examples in some of his public lectures.<ref>Charcot, Jean-Martin. Lecons du mardi. Paris: Bureaux du Progrès médical, 1888-89, vol. 2. p. 11.</ref>
When these claims were developed by neurologist Henry Meige, and others, in conjunction with the myth of the Wandering Jew, this was used as support by the apostles of French anti-Semitism, notably the journalist Edouard Drumont.<ref>Jan Goldstein "The Wandering Jew and the Problem of Psychiatric Anti-Semitism in Fin-de-Siecle France" 20 Journal of Contemporary History (Oct. 1985), p. 521</ref> However, historian of science Ian Hacking cautions that Charcot's interest in Jews and his claims about them must be seen in their nuanced, ambiguous context: "notice how Charcot shared most of the presuppositions of the genetic approach to mental illness that are current today [1998]. He could not fall back on a genome project to support his scientific speculations, but he did have a closed gene pool to study, not just in that Jews were endogamous, but because many Jews in his clinic were descended from relatives, even cousins, who married each other. Scientific reasoning could motivate his constant attention to Jewish family lines, thus a reputable scientific quest merged with a great willingness to see Jews as aberrant, troublesome, ill."<ref>Hacking, Ian. Mad Travelers: Reflections on the Reality of Transient Mental Illnesses. Charlottesville, Va.: University Press of Virginia, 1998. p. 119</ref>
By the very end of the 19th century, anti-Semitism in France had rapidly ascended, due to the Dreyfus affair. "Because of this transition, it has become all too easy to read gross and manifest anti-Semitism" retrospectively into the hospital wards of one or two decades previous.<ref>Hacking, Ian. Mad Travelers: Reflections on the Reality of Transient Mental Illnesses. Charlottesville, Va.: University Press of Virginia, 1998. p. 123</ref>
AwardsEdit
By decree on 22 April 1858, Charcot was made a Knight of France's Legion of Honour.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }} Alt URL</ref> He was subsequently promoted in rank to Officer (decree: 4 April 1880),<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }} Alt URL</ref> and then finally Commander (decree: 12 January 1892).<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }} Alt URL.</ref>
OtherEdit
A collection of Charcot's correspondence is held at the United States National Library of Medicine.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>
Charcot Island in Antarctica was discovered by his son, Jean-Baptiste Charcot, who named the Island in honor of his father.<ref name= ExploringFrontiers>Mills (2003), p. 135</ref>
The Charcot Award is given every two years by the Multiple Sclerosis International Federation for a lifetime of outstanding research into the understanding or treatment of multiple sclerosis.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>
EponymsEdit
Template:See also Charcot's name is associated with many diseases and conditions including:<ref name=WhoNamedCharcot/>
- Charcot's artery (lenticulostriate artery)
- Charcot's joint (diabetic arthropathy)
- Charcot's disease (amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, the most-common subtype of motor neurone disease—also known as Lou Gehrig's disease)
- Charcot–Marie–Tooth disease (peripheral muscular atrophy), named with Pierre Marie and Howard Henry Tooth
- Charcot–Wilbrand syndrome (visual agnosia and loss of ability to revisualise images), named with Hermann Wilbrand
- Charcot's intermittent hepatic fever (intermittent pain, intermittent fever, intermittent jaundice, and loss of weight)
- Charcot–Bouchard aneurysms (tiny aneurysms of the penetrating branches of middle cerebral artery in hypertensives), named with Charles-Joseph Bouchard
- Charcot's triad of acute cholangitis (right upper quadrant pain, jaundice, and fever)
- Charcot's neurologic triad of multiple sclerosis (nystagmus, intention tremor, and dysarthria)
- Charcot–Leyden crystals due to the lysis of eosinophils in cases of allergic diseases, named with Ernst Viktor von Leyden
- Souques–Charcot geroderma: a variant of Hutchinson–Gilford disease, named with Alexandre-Achille Souques<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation
|CitationClass=web }}</ref>
- Charcot–Gombault necrosis: a biliary infarct, named with Albert Gombault<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref>
His name is also associated with a type of high-pressure shower.
In popular cultureEdit
A 2024 award-winning historical literary novel The Dream Collector - Sabrine & Sigmund Freud by R.w. Meek, published by Historium Press, explores the relationship between Dr. Charcot and his patient known as the Princess of Hysteria; the secrets of Charcot's stenographer, Julie Forette, and the blossoming dream interpretations of his new intern, a young Sigmund Freud. Winner of the 2022 Palm Beach Book Festival book contest, and the 2023 Runner-up for book of the year at The Historical Fiction Company.
In literature, Charcot's hypnosis is mentioned in Bram Stoker's novel Dracula.<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref> He figures in Per Olov Enquist's 2004 novel The Book about Blanche and Marie,<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> and in the 2005 novel by Sebastian Faulks, Human Traces,<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> as well as Alasdair Gray's 1992 Poor Things.
A 2012 French historical drama film Augustine, is about a fictional love affair between Charcot and his patient Louise Augustine Gleizes, who was known as Augustine or A.<ref name="Louise"/><ref name="Alice">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref><ref name=NYTReview>Template:Cite news</ref><ref name=LATimesReview>Template:Cite news</ref> Charcot is a central figure in the 2021 French film, The Mad Women's Ball.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>
The 2024 novel The Madwomen of Paris by Jennifer Cody Epstein features Charcot as a major historical figure and explores the lives of several of his patients through historical fiction.<ref>...</ref>
In music, the Scottish experimental hip hop group Hector Bizerk wrote the song "Dr. Charcot" for their 2015 album The Waltz Of Modern Psychiatry.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> Charcot is the main character of the song "Let Yourself Go" form The Alan Parsons Project 1990 album Freudiana.
QuotationsEdit
- "In the last analysis, we see only what we are ready to see, what we have been taught to see. We eliminate and ignore everything that is not a part of our prejudices."<ref name=Kundu>Template:Cite journal</ref>
- "To learn how to treat a disease, one must learn how to recognize it. The diagnosis is the best trump in the scheme of treatment."<ref name=Kundu/>
- "Symptoms, then, are in reality nothing but a cry from suffering organs."<ref name=Kundu/>
- "If you do not have a proven treatment for certain illnesses, bid Template:Sic your time, do what you can, but do not harm your patients."<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation
|CitationClass=web }}</ref>
- "...perfectly legitimate pathological phenomena, in which the will of the patient counts for nothing, absolutely nothing"; in reference to the clinical features of hysteria.<ref name=Jeste2007p8>Jeste (2007) p. 8</ref>
BibliographyEdit
- Neurologie, [s.l.], [s.n.], [s.d.], manuscrit de 395 feuillets (fonds : manuscrits des leçons de J.M.Charcot).
- Leçons cliniques sur les maladies des vieillards et les maladies chroniques. Paris: Adrien Delahaye, 1874.
- Exposé des titres scientifiques. Versailles: Imprimeries Cerf, 1878.
- Sur les divers états nerveux déterminés par l'hypnotisation chez les hystériques. In Comptes Rendues hebdomadaires des séances de l'Académie des Sciences 94 (1882): 403-405.
- Leçons sur les maladies du système nerveux. Paris: Delahaye et Lecrosnier, 1885-1887.
- Avec Paul Richer, Les Démoniaques dans l'art. Paris: Delahaye et Lecrosnier, 1887.
- Avec Paul Richer, Les Difformes et les Malades dans l'art, Lecrosnier et Babé, 1889.
- La foi qui guérit [archive]. Paris: Felix Alcan, 1897. 38 p.
See alsoEdit
NotesEdit
ReferencesEdit
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- Harris, J.C., "A Clinical Lesson at the Salpêtrière", Archives of General Psychiatry, Vol.62, No.5, (May 2005), pp. 470–472.
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Further readingEdit
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External linksEdit
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- Biography and bibliography in the Virtual Laboratory of the Max Planck Institute for the History of Science
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