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Lessons From History

Hector Landouzy on facial paralysis in newborn children: The case studies of a 19th-century French hospital physician

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Pages 180-186 | Received 15 Sep 2003, Accepted 20 Feb 2004, Published online: 10 Jul 2009
 

Abstract

Marc-Hector Landouzy (1812–1864) was one of the first to describe facial paralysis in newborn, through a series of case studies. By examining these four cases in the context of Landouzy's life, publications and professional circumstances, this study shows how case studies were an important part of the scientific revolution within medicine in the 19th century. Landouzy, soon followed by others, used the growing clinical populations of Parisian hospitals, patho-anatomy and cutting-edge physiologic techniques to help describe a previously ignored disease among newborns. His case studies, in particular, are a valuable example of the emerging interest in children as a clinical population and of early interest in child neurology.

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