'Henri François Le Dran' (
October 13,
1685 -
October 17,
1770) was a French
surgeon. He gave lectures with the Royal Academy of Medicine in
Paris, and practiced
surgery at
Hôpital de la Charité. He is remembered for his work with surgeon
Jean-Louis Petit (1674-1750), and one of his more famous students was Swiss
anatomist Albrecht von Haller (1708-1777).
Le Dran is remembered for his pioneer research of
cancer, and his work regarding military surgery. He was the first physician to realize that cancer was a local affliction, and not a systemic malady. He postulated that cancer progressed in stages, and that it began as a local disease of an organ. He advocated surgery for cancer before the
tumor was allowed to
metastasize through the
lymphatic system and affect other parts of the body.
From his experience with gunshot wounds in battle, he did early research of
shock, which he described as a collapse of vital functions, and as a "rude unhinging of the machinery of life". Le Dran also made important contributions involving
mastectomy and
lithotomy operations. His best known written work is a 1749 surgical treatise called ''Traité des opérations de chirurgie''.
References
★
Short Biography of Henri Le Dran