Sabouraud, Raymond Jacques Adrien, 1864-1938

Enlarge text Shrink text
  • Personality
| מספר מערכת 987007314403705171
Information for Authority record
Name (Latin)
Sabouraud, Raymond Jacques Adrien, 1864-1938
Other forms of name
Sabouraud, Raimond Jacques Adrien, 1864-1938
Date of birth
1864-11-24
Date of death
1938-04-02
Gender
male
MARC
MARC
Other Identifiers
VIAF: 27202611
Wikidata: Q174917
Library of congress: no2011047767
Sources of Information
  • Sur les pas de Montaigne, c1937:t.p. (Dr Raimond Sabouraud)
  • BnF database, Mar. 24, 2011(hdg.: Sabouraud, Raymond Jacques Adrien, 1864-1938; doctor of medicine, dermatologist; painter and sculptor; essayist)
  • Library of Congress database, Mar. 24, 2011(hdg.: Sabouraud, Raimond Jacques Adrien, 1864-1938)
  • Institut Pasteur archives WWW pages, Mar. 24, 2011:biographies/s (Sabouraud, Raymond, 1864-1938)
1 / 4
Wikipedia description:

Raymond Jacques Adrien Sabouraud (French pronunciation: [ʁɛmɔ̃ ʒak adʁijɛ̃ sabuʁo]; 24 November 1864 – 4 February 1938) was a French physician born in Nantes. He specialized in dermatology and mycology, and was also an accomplished painter and sculptor. He studied medicine in Nantes and Paris, and worked as a hospital interne at the Hôpital Saint-Louis under Ernest Besnier and at the Hôpital des Enfants-Assistés under Edouard Francis Kirmisson. Afterwards he studied bacteriology with Pierre Paul Émile Roux at the Pasteur Institute. In 1894 he received his doctorate, and he later served as chief of Jean Alfred Fournier's laboratory at the Hôpital Saint-Louis. In 1904, Sabouraud introduced radiological treatment against ringworm of the scalp. He was well known for his knowledge of scalp diseases, and had a clinic which attracted patients from all over the world. He invented a method to select fungi with a medium of low pH and a rather high concentration of sugar. This medium, called Sabouraud agar is named after him. With Ferdinand-Jean Darier (1856–1938) and Henri Gougerot (1881–1955), he was the editor of an eight-volume encyclopedia of dermatology titled Nouvelle Pratique Dermatologique. His Manuel élémentaire de dermatologie topographique régionale (1905), was translated into English and published as Elementary Manual of Regional Topographical Dermatology (1906), and several years later re-published as A Manual of Regional Topographical Dermatology (1912).

Read more on Wikipedia >