Marc Tiffeneau
Appearance
Marc Tiffeneau | |
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Académie de Médecine |
Marc Émile Pierre Adolphe Tiffeneau (November 5, 1873 – May 20, 1945) was a French
Tiffeneau-Demjanov rearrangement
.
In 1899 he graduated from the École de pharmacie de Paris, and afterwards began work as a
Hôtel-Dieu de Paris. From 1926 to 1944 he was a professor of pharmacology to the faculty of medicine at the Sorbonne.[2]
He also sat as one of the four members of the
Drug Supervisory Body (predecessor of the International Narcotics Control Board) from 1933 until his death.[3][4]
Tiffeneau received his Ph.D in sciences in 1907 and his Ph.D in medicine in 1910.Société chimique de France.[citation needed]
Selected works
- Le système nerveux autonome sympathique et parasympathique, 1923; (translation of John Newport Langley).
- Abrégé de pharmacologie, 1926, 7th edition 1947.
- Les Amines biologiques, 1934; (preface by Tiffeneau).[5]
- Vade-mecum de médecine pratique, 1940.[2]
References
- S. (1945). "Nekrologe". Cellular and Molecular Life Sciences. 1 (5): 125. .
- Alex McKenzie (1945). "Prof. Marc Tiffeneau". Nature. 156 (3970): 656–657. doi:10.1038/156656a0.
- ^ a b Marc Pierre Emile TIFFENEAU (1873-1945) Société d'Histoire de la Pharmacie
- ^ a b c TIFFENEAU Marc Émile Pierre Adolphe Sociétés savantes de France
- ^ League of Nations. (1939). Organisation d’Hygiène. Rapport au Conseil sur les travaux de la Trentième Session du Comité d’Hygiène (Genève, 4 au 6 mai 1939) [C.136.M.87.1939.III]. Geneva: League of Nations. p. 6
- ^ "Dangerous Drugs in 1946: Estimated World Requirements." (1946, March 30). Australasian Journal of Pharmacy, pp. 174–175. Retrieved from https://ajp.com.au/wp-content/uploads/2021/03/Vol027-1946-Mar-0167-0252.pdf
- ^ IDREF.fr bibliography