Joseph Babinski

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Joseph Babinski
Babinski sign

Joseph Jules François Félix Babinski (

Babinski sign, a pathological plantar reflex indicative of corticospinal tract
damage.

Life

Born in Paris, Babinski was the son of a Polish military officer, Aleksander Babiński (1824–1889), and his wife Henryka Wareńska Babińska (1819–1897),[1] who in 1848 fled Warsaw for Paris because of a Tsarist reign of terror instigated to stall Polish attempts at achieving independence and breaking the union between Congress Poland and the Russian Empire.

Babinski received his medical degree from the

Salpêtrière
Hospital and became his favorite student.

Salpêtrière patient, "Blanche" (Marie Wittman), who is supported by Babiński (rear). Note the similarity to the illustration on the back wall.[2]

Charcot's 1893 death left Babinski without support, and he subsequently never participated in qualifying academic competitions. Free of teaching duties, while working at the Hôpital de la Pitié he was left with ample time to devote himself to clinical neurology. He was a masterful clinician, minimally dependent on neuropathological examinations and laboratory tests.

Babinski also took an interest in the

organic diseases, and coined the concept of pithiatism. In 1914, Babinski introduced the important concept of ‘anosognosia’ to name a disorder characterized by denial of illness or lack of awareness of disability.[3]

In 1896, at a meeting of the Société de Biologie, Babiński, in a 26-line presentation, delivered the first report on the "phenomène des orteils", i.e., that while the normal reflex of the sole of the foot is a

Babinski's sign
."

During World War I, Babinski had charge of many traumatic neurology cases at the Pitié Hospitals.

He was professor of neurology at the University of Paris.

Babinski wrote over 200 papers on nervous disorders. With Jules Froment he published Hysteropithiatisme en Neurologie de Guerre (1917), which was translated into English in 1918 by Sir H. Rolleston. Babiński published some of his works in Polish.

Babinski lived with his younger brother, Henri Babinski, a distinguished engineer and famous cook who, as "Ali Baba," published a classic cookbook.

With Pierre Palau, Babinski, under the pseudonym "Olaf," wrote a disturbing play, Les détraquées, which premiered at the Deux-Masques theater in 1921. The play involves the murder of a young pupil at a girls' school by the school's principal and her accomplice, a dance teacher. André Breton discusses the work in Nadja.[4]

Babinski died in the same year as two great Polish neurologists, Edward Flatau and Samuel Goldflam. In his last years he had suffered from Parkinson's disease.

Recognition

Babinski lived to see his achievements in French neurology internationally acclaimed. He was honored by

Wilno University, by the American Neurological Society, and by other foreign societies. He is also a patron of the three large neuro-psychatric hospitals in Poland (Kraków, Wrocław, Łódź
).

Associated eponyms

See also

Footnotes

  1. ^ Joseph Babinski. nndb.com
  2. ^ The identities of each of the thirty separate individuals that are represented in this composite (1887) presentation painting by André Brouillet (1857–1914) have been clearly identified at p.471 of Harris, J.C., "A Clinical Lesson at the Salpêtrière", Archives of General Psychiatry, Vol.62, No.5, (May 2005), pp.470–472.
  3. ^ Marková I S and Berrios G E (2014): The construction of anosognosia: History and implications. Cortex, 61: 9-17.
  4. .

External links