Rééuction des fractures récentes transcervicales du col du fémur avant ostéosynthèse. Ostéosynthèse des fractures récentes transcervicales du col du fémur. Extrait de La Presse Médicale (Nos 74 et 78, des 15 et 29 septembre 1923) ROBINEAU Maurice & CONTREMOULINS Gaston CHIRURGIE,ORTHOPEDIE,RADIOLOGIE
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1 vol. in-8 (23.5 x 16.5 cm), 48 pp., 26 figures dans le texte (11 pour la 1ère partie et 15 pour la seconde), broché, couverture imprimée, dos bruni, quelques traces de plis, intérieur en très bon état. Très rare tirage à part (1 seul exemplaire au Catalogue Collectif de France) de cet ouvrage novateur, divisé en 2 parties. Maurice Robineau (1870-1950) fut chirurgien des Hôpitaux de Paris, directeur de l'Amphithéâtre des hôpitaux, membre de l'Académie de chirurgie. Gaston Contremoulins (1869-1950), après avoir été préparateur dans le laboratoire de physiologie de Marey, fut un pionnier de la radiologie, devenant chef du laboratoire principal de radiographie des hôpitaux ; il créa à l'hôpital Necker un centre de recherche radiologique et inventa le concept de "radio-chirurgie". La collaboration de Robineau et Contremoulins constitua une étape importante dans l'histoire de l'ostéosynthèse et des prothèses de membres. REFERENCES : Mornet P & Cole G: History Page: Leaders in MSK Radiology,Semin Musculoskelet Radiol. 2020 Oct;24(5):608-610: "Born in 1869, Gaston Contremoulins began his career as a painter. Fascinated by photography and discovery of X-rays by Roentgen in 1895, our ingenious self taught engineer joined the laboratory of microphotography in the faculty of medicine in Paris. He published in 1896 studies in the use of X-rays associated with a compass for research and anatomical localization of foreign bodies in the skull. This work was awarded by the Montyon prize of the French Academy of Sciences in 1897. Appointed chief of radiological laboratories in Paris Hospital in 1898, despite the fact that he was not doctor, he developed his method named metro radiography for localization, then extraction of foreign bodies in all organs mainly during World War 1. He developed with surgeons osteosynthesis and prothesis for wounded soldiers."; Mornet P: Gaston Contremoulins, 1869-1950: Visionary Pioneer of Radiology: "Contremoulins developed a close collaboration with the hospital surgeons, especially at Necker. He focused his applied research in two directions: the use of radiosurgery to extract foreign bodies from the intracranial and thoracic compartments, and the development of an orthopedic radiosurgery to aid the treatment of fractures and the fabrication of prosthetic implants" ; Moreau JF: Second Preface, In Mornet P: Gaston Contremoulins, p. 6: "What a splendid couple were Robineau and Contremoulins, both willing to sacrifice their careers for reasons of honor! What a lesson of humanity! What a pity that it took more than three-quarters of a century and the efforts of a suburban internist to resurrect memories of Necker, which had been a stronghold of kidney transplantation since Marius Bernard in 1952. Those forgotten were two 'Tournnesol scholars' had who laid the foundations for innovative orthopedic surgery, and created prostheses of living bone and mechanical devices that still function a half-century later!"; Böhler L: The Treatment of Fractures, Vol. 2, p. 1239: "Robineau and Contremoulin constructed a very complicated apparatus for determination of the direction of fixation devices and achieved good results."; Bourdillon P, Apra C & Lévêque M: First clinical use of stereotaxy in humans: the key role of x-ray localization discovered by Gaston Contremoulins, J Neurosurg. 2018 Mar;128(3):932-937: "Contremoulins used the principles of modern stereotaxy in association with radiography for the first time, later devoted himself to radiography and radioprotection."; Giller CA, Mornet P & Moreau JF: The first formulation of image-based stereotactic principles: the forgotten work of Gaston Contremoulins, J Neurosurg. 2017 Dec;127(6):1426-1435 ; Patel J : Maurice Robineau (1870-1950), Mem Acad Chir (Paris). 1963 Jan 9-23;89:141-55 ; Fretheim B et al.: Final Results of Osteosynthesis of Fractures of the Femoral neck at modum Sven Johansson, pp. 41-44.
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