Antoine Béclère
Antoine Louis Gustave Béclère, virologist, immunologist, was a pioneer in radiology. In 1897 he created the first laboratory of radiology in Paris.
Biography
Appointed hospital physician in 1893, he initially devoted himself to the study of infectious diseases and immunity. Just under a month after Wilhelm Röntgen discovery of X-ray was published, Oudin and Barthélemy's first fluoroscopy session on January 20 1896 revealed to him the possible applications of X-rays in Medicine. In the summer of 1896, Antoine Béclère performed the first fluoroscopic screening for pulmonary tuberculosis on the maid of his friend Dr. Oudin. From then on, he became an ardent defender of radiology, both nationally and internationally. In March 1897, assisted by André Jousset, then an intern, he organized the first radiology course in France at the Hôpital Tenon. In 1897, he set up the first radiology laboratory at Tenon, where he had just been appointed head of department. In the absence of satisfactory facilities, he left Tenon for the Hôpital Saint-Antoine in 1898, where he set up France's first radiology center, which he ran until his retirement. He combined clinical practice with laboratory research, in particular to measure the new radiations, their intensity and their penetration into the body. In 1899, he published Les Rayons de Rœntgen et le diagnostic de la tuberculose. In 1908, he became a member of the Académie nationale de médecine. In 1909, together with Dr. Félix Blairon, he founded the “Société de radiologie médicale de Paris”, which has since become the Société française de radiologie.Pauline Ramart is his attaché in his radiotherapy department.In 1928, having retired in 1922, he was elected President of the French Academy of Medicine.
In 1929, Antoine Béclère hosted the International Congress of Radiology in Paris. In 1931, he chaired the 3rd International Congress of Medical Radiology in Paris.
Suffering from Radiation burn, he had to have four fingers amputated.