Paul Oscar Blocq
Paul Oscar Blocq was a French pathologist who is remembered for his neuropathological work done with Jean-Martin Charcot and Gheorghe Marinescu at the Salpêtrière in Paris.
Block studied medicine in Paris under Charcot and received a doctorate in 1888 with a dissertation on contractions, spasms and pseudo-contractions. He then worked at the laboratory of Charcot. Blocq and Marinescu were the first physicians to describe extracellular neuritic plaque deposits in the grey matter of the brain. Also the two identified a case of Parkinsonian tremor caused by a tumor in the substantia nigra of the brain. With Marinescu and bacteriologist Victor Babeş, Blocq published an important work on the pathological histology of the nervous system titled Atlas der pathologischen Histologie des Nervensystems. Blocq died at the age of 36 from paralysis or depressive psychosis in the institution of Dr Jacques-Etienne Belhomme.
A disorder known as "Blocq's disease" is named after him. It is also known as astasia-abasia, and is characterized by the inability to stand or walk, despite the capability to move ones' lower limbs when sitting or lying down.