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MARIE FRANCOIS XAVIER BICHAT (1771–1802)

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Originally appearing in Volume V03, Page 912 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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MARIE FRANCOIS XAVIER BICHAT (1771–1802)  , French anatomist and physiologist, was born at Thoirette (Jura) on the 14th of November 1771 . His
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father, a physician, was his first instructor . He entered the college of Nantua, and afterwards studied at Lyons . In mathematics and the
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physical sciences he made rapid progress, but ultimately devoted himself to the study of anatomy and surgery, under the guidance of M . A . Petit (1766–1811), chief surgeon to the Hotel Dieu at Lyons . The revolutionary disturbances compelled him to fly from Lyons and take
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refuge in Paris in 1793 . He there became a pupil of P . J . Desault, who was so strongly impressed with his genius that he took him into his house and treated him as his adopted son . For two years he actively participated in all the labours of Desault, prosecuting at the same time his own re-searches in anatomy and physiology . The sudden
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death of Desault in 1795 was a severe blow to Bichat .

His first care was to acquit himself of the obligations he owed his benefactor, by contributing to the support of his widow and her son, and by conducting to a

close the
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fourth
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volume of Desault's Journal de Chirurgie, to which he added a
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biographical memoir of its author . His next
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object was to reunite and
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digest in one
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body the surgical doctrines which Desault had published in various periodical
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works . Of these he composed, CEuvres chirurgicales de Desault, au tableau de sa
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doctrine, et de sa pratique clans le traitement
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des maladies externes (1798–1799), a
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work in which, although he professes only to set forth the ideas of another, he develops them with the clearness of one who is a master of the subject . In 1797 he began a course of anatomical demonstrations, and his success encouraged him to extend the plan of his lectures, and boldly to announce a course of operative surgery . In the following
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year, 1798, he gave in addition a
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separate course of physiology . A dangerous attack of haemoptysis interrupted his labours for a time; but the danger was no sooner past than he plunged into new engagements with the same ardour .as before . He had now scope in his physiological lectures for a fuller exposition of his
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original views on the animal
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economy, which excited much attention in the medical
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schools at Paris . Sketches of these doctrines were given by him in three papers contained in the
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Memoirs of the Societe Medicale d'Emulation, which he founded in 1796, and they were afterwards more fully
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developed in his Traits sur
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les membranes ("Soo) . His next publication was the Recherches physiologiques sur la
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vie et sur is molt (1800), and it was quickly followed by his Anatomie gentrale (1801), the work which contains the fruits of his-most profound and original researches . He began another work, under the title Anatomie descriptive (1801–1803), in which the
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organs were arranged according to his
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peculiar classification of their functions, but lived to publish only the first two volumes . It was completed on the same plan by his pupils, M . F .

R .

Buisson (1776–1805) and P . J . Roux (1780–1854) . Before Bichat had attained the age of eight-and-twenty he was appointed physician to the Hotel Dieu, a situation which opened an immense field to his ardent spirit of inquiry . In the investigation of diseases he pursued the same method of observation and experiment which had characterized his researches in physiology . He learned their
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history by studying them at the bedside of his patients, and by accurate dissection of their bodies after death . He engaged in a series of
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examinations, with a view to ascertain the changes induced in the various organs by disease, and in less than six months he had opened above six
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hundred bodies . He was anxious also to determine with more precision than had been attempted before, the effects of remedial agents, and instituted with this view a series of
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direct experiments which yielded a vast store of valuable material . Towards the end of his
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life he was also engaged on a new classification of diseases . A fall from a
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staircase at the Hotel Dieu resulted in a fever, and, exhausted by his excessive labours and by constantly breathing the tainted air of the dissecting-
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room, he died on the 22nd of
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July 1802 . His bust, together with that of Desault, was placed in the Hotel Dieu by order of
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Napoleon .

End of Article: MARIE FRANCOIS XAVIER BICHAT (1771–1802)
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