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French physician, botanist and mycologist From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
François Victor Mérat de Vaumartoise (5 July 1780 in Paris – 13 March 1851 in Paris) was a French physician, botanist and mycologist.
In 1803 he obtained his medical doctorate with a thesis on heavy metal poisoning,[1] afterwards serving as chef de clinique at the Hôpital de la Charité in Paris. He was a member of the Académie nationale de médecine, a correspondent member of the Société linnéenne de Lyon (1824–1851)[2] and a member of the Société nationale et centrale d'agriculture.[3] He was an Officer of the Légion d'honneur (1847)[4] and a Chevalier of the Order du Christ de Portugal (1828).[3]
He expanded the work reported in his doctoral dissertation with additional reports on the effects of heavy metal poisoning in craftsmen.[5] During his ten years at Charité he treated and cured numerous patients with lead poisoning.[3]
He was the taxonomic authority of the lichenized fungi genus Lasallia [6] and of the botanical genera Corvisartia (family Asteraceae), Lerouxia (family Primulaceae) and Robertia (family Ranunculaceae).[7] His botanical and medical interest met in his report on the use of pomegranate root to fight tapeworm infections. He received a monetary award from the Academy of Sciences for this work.[3]
With Adrien Jacques de Lens, he was co-author of a medical dictionary, titled "Dictionnaire universel de matière médicale et de thérapeutique générale", published in seven volumes from 1829 to 1846. Other written efforts by Mérat de Vaumartoise include:
Toward the end of his life Dr. Merat published a bibliography of his 213 printed works.[10] In the introduction he stated: "At the age of seventy and at an advanced stage in my career, I felt I had to print an inventory of my work, to remind myself of the number and nature of my works over the past half-century. Study has been my constant need, I owe it the quiet days of my simple and busy life; it made me forget, on a few occasions, the pains attached to our human nature, and from which my obscurity has not always been able to remove me."
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