Paul Briquet

Paul Briquet or Pierre Briquet (12 January 1796 to 25 January 1881) was a French physician and psychologist that advanced the reasoned treatment of disturbed people said to be hysterics.

Briquet became a medical doctor in 1824, a professor in 1827. In 1836 he operated at the Cochin hospital and in 1846 at La Charité hospital. In 1853 he described the preparation and use of quinine.[1]

He published Traité clinique et thérapeutique de l’Hystérie in 1859, and the following year he was admitted to the Academie de Medecine.

A type of personality disorder called Briquet’s syndrome[2] is classified as somatic symptom disorder.

"Although many of his theoretical concepts, basic scientific knowledge and data processing techniques were primitive by our standards, his approach, his emphasis on demonstrable facts, and his many well-substantiated conclusions mark his Treatise on Hysteria as an avant-garde work relevant even today"[3]

Briquet was a proponent of male hysteria in his Treatise. He cites Louyer-Villermay, M. Dubois, M. Landouzy, and M. Monneret as putting to rest the doubt over male hysteria.[4]:11 He wrote, "Regardless of the denials, men may suffer from hysteria, and the cases that prove it are not rare, and it is only possible to prevent it by acknowledging that."[4]:12 As a mental condition, hysteria is not due to uterine influence: "Hysteria may occur in men, who have no uterus, in non-menstruating young women whose uterus is still in a rudimentary state and where it remains without influence, and in old women where it no longer influences."[4]:585 Briquet describes circumstances where simultaneously the senses are excited, and efforts are made to conceal the excitation, as precursors to hysteria.[4]:164

References

  1. P. Briquet (1853) Traité thérapeutique du quinquina et de ses preparations from Internet Archive
  2. C. Robert Cloninger, T. Reich & S. B. Guze (1975) "The Multifactorial Model of Disease Transmission: III. Familial Relationship between Sociopathy and Hysteria (Briquet's Syndrome)", British Journal of Psychiatry 127:23-32.
  3. Francois M. Mai (1982) "The forgotten avant-garde", Trends in Neurosciences 5: 67,8 doi:10.1016/0166-2236(82)90032-7
  4. 1 2 3 4 P. Briquet (1859) Traité clinique et thérapeutique de l’Hystérie from Gallica
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