February 6 – On This Day in Medical History

Medical milestones, landmark publications, and notable births and deaths associated with February 6.

Events

1813 – French physician, Charles Alexandre Hippolyte Amable Bertrand (1777-1849) was the first to use charcoal in the successful treatment of acute poisoning in humans (…on himself)

Experience XI. Mercury Oximuriate. February 6, 1813, at eight o’clock in the morning, I took on an empty stomach three grains of corrosive sublimate in a cup of a strong solution of powdered charcoal…At twenty minutes past eight, I felt a slight pain, as if oppressive, in the precordial region, with a little heat in the stomach. For an hour I felt a very slight sensation of thirst, which I made no attempt to satisfy; and at ten o’clock, not feeling the slightest pain, I breakfasted with relish, and I was not in the least inconvenienced.

Bertrand, 1817

Births

1738 Pierre-Joseph Desault (1738-1795), French surgeon; early description of Colles fracture (1801)

1864 Alexander Tietze (1864-1927), German surgeon; described Tietze syndrome (1921)

1893 Dame Ida Caroline Mann (1893-1983), English ophthalmologist. Described the Ida Mann classification of Coloboma (1937)

1893 Madge Thurlow Macklin (1893-1962), American medical geneticist; described Curth-Macklin syndrome (1954)


Deaths

2004 Pirkko Santavuori (1933-2004), Finnish paediatric neurologist; described Santavuori disease (1973), and Muscle–Eye–Brain (MEB) disease (1977)


Further reading

BA MA (Oxon) MBChB (Edin) FACEM FFSEM. Emergency physician, Sir Charles Gairdner Hospital. Passion for rugby; medical history; medical education; and asynchronous learning #FOAMed evangelist. Co-founder and CTO of Life in the Fast lane | On Call: Principles and Protocol 4e| Eponyms | Books |