Jean-François Calot
![](http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/c/c0/Jean-Fran%C3%A7ois_Calot.jpg/220px-Jean-Fran%C3%A7ois_Calot.jpg)
Jean-François Calot (17 May 1861 – 1 March 1944)
Biography
Calot was born in a farmer family of six children and spent his childhood in Arrens-Marsous, France.[3] He received his bachelor's degree in 1880 at Saint-Pe de Bigorre and in 1881 moved to Paris, where he worked as a tutor to pay for his university education. While still a student he described Calot's triangle in his doctoral thesis, defended on 12 December 1890.[1] He then worked as a surgeon at l'Hôpital Rotschild and l'Hôpital Cazin-Perrochaud in Berck. He described his technique for treating Pott's disease of the spine in a paper he read to the Academy of Medicine in Paris in 1896.[2] Much of his work later in his career was in orthopaedic surgery, particularly the treatment of war injuries;[4] he founded the Institut orthopédique de Berck in 1900.[2]
Callot married Marie Bacqueville (1870–1934), and together they had four daughters.[1]
Eponyms
- Calot's triangle – isosceles triangle bounded by the common hepatic duct, the cystic duct and the cystic artery; it remains an important landmark for surgeons performing cholecystectomy to avoid damaging the common bile duct.[5]
- Calot's node – gallbladder lymph node.
- Calot's method – treatment of tuberculous abscesses by repeated puncture and immobilisation.[6]
- Calot's operation – surgical correction of spinal deformity due to Pott's disease (spinal tuberculosis).
References
- ^ a b c Philippe Loisel La Vie et l'OEuvre de François Calot, chirurgien orthopédiste de Berck (in French). Report presented at Société française d'Histoire de la Médecine on 18 March 1987.
- ^ Who Named It?
- PMID 9926757. gives birth date as 21 May
- PMID 12404217. Retrieved 2011-01-08.
- PMID 12677139.
- PMID 17152776.
External links