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Jules Froment

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Name
  
Jules Froment

Died
  
1946

Jules Froment (Lyon, 1878 – 1946) was a French neurologist. He earned his doctorate in 1906 with a thesis on heart diseases associated with thyrotoxicosis. For much of his career he was a professor at Lyon.

Contents

Life

Froment is remembered for his work with neurological diseases. During World War I he was stationed at Rennes, where he treated soldiers with nervous disorders. After the war he co-wrote an important work with Joseph Babinski (1857-1932) concerning the etiology of phenomena such as "shell shock" and "combat hysteria." The study was titled Hysterie, pithiatisme et troubles nerveux d'ordre reflexe en neurologie de guerre, and was considered controversial at the time.

Also with Babinski, Froment is credited with describing a disease characterized by a combination of vasomotor disorders, muscular atrophy and tissue damage. It is now known as Babinski-Froment syndrome.

Froment is credited with devising a series of tests for nerve dysfunction, including a simple way to test ulnar nerve weakness: if a patient holds a sheet of paper between thumb and index finger and the thumb flexes, this indicates ulnar nerve palsy. This test is used to assess the condition of the flexor pollicis brevis muscle.

Written works

  • La prehension dans les paralysies du nerf cubital et le signe du pouce; La presse medicale, Paris, 1915, 23: 409.
  • Heredodegenerations retinienne et spino-cerebeleuse; variantes ophtalmoscopiques et neurologique presentes par trois generations successive Journal de medecine de Lyon, 1937: 153-163.
  • Troubles nerveux d’ordre reflexe. In their: Hysterie, pithiatisme et troubles nerveux d’ordre reflexe. J. Babinski, J. Froment: Paris, Masson, 1917.
  • References

    Jules Froment Wikipedia