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'''Prosper Ménière''' ([[June 18]], [[1799]] – [[February 7]], [[1862]]) was a French [[physician]] who in [[1861]] described the symptoms now known as [[Ménière's disease]], and the symptoms now concerned with [[vertigo (medical)|vertigo]]. He was born in [[Angers]], [[France]], and died in [[Paris]].
'''Prosper Ménière''' ([[June 18]], [[1799]] &ndash; [[February 7]], [[1862]]) was a French [[physician]] who in [[1861]] described the symptoms now known as [[Ménière's disease]], and the symptoms now concerned with [[vertigo (medical)|vertigo]].<ref>{{WhoNamedIt|doctor|1859|Prosper Meniere}}</ref> He was born in [[Angers]], [[France]], and died in [[Paris]].


==Footnotes==
Diseases of the inner ear were unknown until Prosper Ménière in 1861 described the disease that bears his name. This pioneering achievement, however, was not fully appreciated in the Paris of his time. Being considered incurable, deafness was no fashionable field of investigations.
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Prosper Menière was born in Angers on the [[Loire]], the third of four children of a prosperous merchant. He entered the [[Lycée]] in [[1812]], at age 13. There he stayed for four years through the decline and fall of [[Napoleon]], receiving the excellent education given to a [[France|French]] boy in the classics and humanities. In [[1816]] he entered the preparatory school of medicine at the [[University of Angers]]. An excellent student, he won the annual prize in [[1817]] and [[1818]], and in [[1819]] commenced medical studies at the [[Hôtel Dieu]] in Paris. He became an extern in [[1822]], an intern in [[1823]]. Menière soon revealed intellectual brilliance, receiving several awards for his achievements. And in [[1826]] he was gold medalist.

He qualified in medicine in 1826, obtained his doctorate in [[1828]] and gained the prestigious but unenviable appointment as clinical assistant to the famous [[Baron Dupuytren]] at the Hôtel Dieu. He occupied this demanding post with distinction and gained immense practical experience, especially during the political upheaval of 1830, when hundreds of injured rioters were admitted to that hospital. In [[1832]] he was appointed Chef de clinique at the faculty and then became agrégé under Chomel.

In 1832, Ménière was president of the "jurys" in medicine, the equivalent of the examining board. Later that year he became a professeur agrégé, or associate professor by examination, in the [[University of Paris]]. That year his life took an unexpected turn, as he was nominated by the government to ascertain whether Duchess de Berry was pregnant. She was the wife of the murdered [[Duc de Berry]] son of [[Charles X of France]], and had considerable support for the accession of her own son to the throne. Méniére determined that she was pregnant but it was found that this was the result of a secret marriage to an Italian, and popular support melted away. She was no longer a problem to the government of the day, who released her and Méniére went with her to Naples.

In [[1834]], he was appointed Chef de Clinique to Chomel, a noted physician and Academician, and in [[1835]] was sent by the government to the Departments of Aude and the [[Haute Garonne]] to organize cholera assistance. For this work he was made a [[Chevalier of the Legion of Honour]].

If Ménière's gynecological expertise had a negative effect on the succession to the French throne, it certainly did not hurt his own professional career. In 1835 an epidemic of cholera broke out in southern France, and the government assigned him with the leadership of the campaign against the disease. He went to Aude and Haute-Garonne, and was so successful that he was made a knight of the Legion of Honour.

In [[1838]], a year after an unsuccessful application to become professor of medicine and hygiene, Menière, on the recommendation of Mathéo-José-Bonaventure Orfila ([[1787]]-[[1853]]), became Médecin en chef at Institut des Sourds-Muets, the Imperial Institution for Deaf Mutes, in Paris and commenced the studies for which he became famous. These culminated in his classic account of the condition which bears his name.

Ménière based his observations on recurrent labyrinthine vertigo which he published in 1861 on the findings of [[Marie-Jean-Pierre Flourens]] ([[1794]]-[[1867]]) who in [[1820]], in experiments on birds, had distinguished between the function of hearing and balance of the inner ear, and the function of the individual semicircular canals.

He frequented the social circles, and amongst his friends in political literary and scientific circles were [[Victor Hugo]] ([[1802]]-[[1885]]) and [[Honoré de Balzac]] ([[1799]]-[[1850]]). Ménière was persona grata in many of the most select salons in Paris and probably as well known as a figure in society as he was as a physician. In 1838 he married Mademoiselle Becquerel, who was related to [[Anton Henri Becquerel]], the discoverer of [[radioactivity]].

Ménière was an elegant and prolific writer and. The sheer volume of his writings makes one wonder how he found time to do anything else. In 1861 alone appeared over his name in the Gazette Médicale no fewer than eleven of the weekly "feuilletons." Five of these were historical, on medicine as practised in Angers from the 15th through the 18th centuries; four were botanical; and two were entitled, "Encore un mot sur la pellagre." He wrote on diverse themes on Roman poets and Cicero; one of them concerned Horatius' interest in medicine - provoked by his interest in finding a cure for his gout. In another article Ménière depicts a judge who is handicapped by impaired hearing. Ménière treated him by putting pressure on the [[eardrum]] with a golden needle. His hearing improved. Maybe this was the first case in history of a mobilisation of the stirrup in [[otosclerosis]]? He had many talents and received recognition as an [[archaeologist]] and [[botanist]]. His interest in [[botany]] was strong, and he was a connoisseur of orchids.

Menière died in Paris of influenzal [[pneumonia]] on 7 February 1862 at the age of 63 years.

His son was Emile Ménière, an otologist who followed his father as senior physician at the Institute for the Deaf.

==Bibliography==
*Mémoire sur la grossesse interstitielle. 1826.
*Mémoire sur l’hémorrhagie cérébrale pendant la grossesse, pendant et après l’accouchement. 1828.
*Observations et réflexions sur les abcès chroniques qui se développent sur le trajet des côtes. 1829.
*L’Hôtel-Dieu de Paris en Juillet et Août 1830. Histoire de ce qui s’est passé dans cet hôpital pendant et après les trois grandes journées; etc. 1830.
*Mémoire sur l’exploration de l’appareil auditif. 1841.
*De la guérison de la surdi-mutié et de l’éducation des sourds-muets etc. 1853.
*Du mariage entre parents consideré comme cause de la surdi-mutié congénitale. 1856.
*Études médicales sur les poètes latins. Paris, Baillière, 1858.
*Sur une forme particulière de surdité grave dépendant d'une lésion de l'oreille interne. Gazette médicale de Paris S 3 16: 29. 1861.
*Cicéron médecins. 1862.


==External links==
==External links==
*[http://www.whonamedit.com/doctor.cfm/1859.html Biography of Prosper Meniere], WhoNamedIt.com
*[http://www.prospermeniere.com/prosper_default.asp Prosper Meniere Society] official website
*[http://www.prospermeniere.com/prosper_default.asp Prosper Meniere Society] official website

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Revision as of 00:12, 16 November 2007

Prosper Ménière (June 18, 1799February 7, 1862) was a French physician who in 1861 described the symptoms now known as Ménière's disease, and the symptoms now concerned with vertigo.[1] He was born in Angers, France, and died in Paris.

Footnotes