Georges Gilles de la Tourette
French physician and the namesake of Tourette's syndrome (1857–1904)
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Georges Albert Édouard Brutus Gilles de la Tourette (French: [ʒɔʁʒ albɛʁ edwaʁ bʁytys ʒil də la tuʁɛt]; 30 October 1857 – 22 May 1904) was a French neurologist and the eponym of Tourette syndrome, a neurodevelopmental disorder[1][2] characterized by tics.[3] His main contributions in medicine were in the fields of hypnotism and hysteria.[3]
30 October 1857
Georges Gilles de la Tourette | |
|---|---|
| Born | Georges Albert Édouard Brutus Gilles de la Tourette 30 October 1857 Saint-Gervais-les-Trois-Clochers, Vienne, France |
| Died | 22 May 1904 (aged 46) |
| Citizenship | France |
| Alma mater | University of Poitiers, University of Paris |
| Known for | Namesake of Tourette syndrome |
Early life
Gilles de la Tourette was born the oldest of four children on 30 October 1857[3] in the small town of Saint-Gervais-les-Trois-Clochers in the district of Châtellerault, near the city of Loudun.[4][5]
During 1873, Gilles de la Tourette began medical studies at Poitiers at the age of sixteen.[3] In 1881, he relocated to Paris, where he continued his studies at the Laennec Hospital.[3]
Career

Gilles de la Tourette began his internship in 1884, working "at a superhuman pace, publishing, teaching and practicing clinical medicine".[3] He became a student, amanuensis, and house physician of his mentor, influential contemporary neurologist Jean-Martin Charcot, director of the Salpêtrière Hospital.[3][6][7] Charcot also helped him to advance in his academic career. Gilles de la Tourette studied and lectured in psychotherapy, hysteria, and medical and legal ramifications of mesmerism (modern-day hypnosis).[8] Colleagues and historians have described him as a "highly intelligent, if irascible, character".[3]
In 1884, Charcot asked Gilles de la Tourette to work on motor disorders; latah, myriachit, and the Jumping Frenchmen of Maine had recently been described, and Gilles de la Tourette believed the conditions were related and separate from chorea.[3] He described the symptoms of Tourette syndrome in one patient and collected previous observations of similar cases, and in 1885, he published a further nine cases using the name maladie des tics for the disorder.[9] Charcot renamed the syndrome "Gilles de la Tourette's illness" in his honor,[4] although the work was not well received at Salpêtrière.[3]
Gilles de la Tourette published an article on hysteria in the German Army, which angered Bismarck,[10] and a further article about unhygienic conditions in the floating hospitals on the river Thames.[3] With Gabriel Legué, he analyzed 17th-century abbess Jeanne des Anges' account of her hysteria that was allegedly based on her unrequited love for a priest Urbain Grandier, who was later burned for witchcraft.[10]
Personal life and decline

Gilles de la Tourette married his cousin Marie Detrois (1867–1922) on 2 August 1887 in Loudon. Paul Brouardel and Charcot were witnesses. They had four children, three of whom lived to adulthood.[11]
In 1893, Rose Kamper, a former female patient, who was later revealed to have psychosis, shot Gilles de la Tourette in the neck,[3][12][a] claiming one of his colleagues had hypnotized her against her will.[3] His mentor, Charcot, had died recently, and his young son had also died recently.[3] Although he recovered from the shooting and continued to work and organize lectures, after these events, Gilles de la Tourette began to display symptoms of severe depression.[3] After 1893, his mental health noticeably declined.[4]
In 1901, Charcot's son, Jean-Baptiste, convinced Gilles de la Tourette to travel to Switzerland on a ruse, and had him committed to a psychiatric hospital, where Gilles de la Tourette was diagnosed with tertiary syphilis.[13] His condition worsened and he was forced to resign.[4] His wife and colleagues were not forthcoming about the causes of his internment.[14] He died on 22 May 1904[3][4][14] with advanced dementia[4] at the Lausanne Psychiatric Hospital in Cery from what was labeled a status seizure, and that his wife described as apoplexy.[14] Lees (2019) states that "Gilles de la Tourette died of general paralysis of the insane (neurosyphilis)".[10]
Writings
Gilles de la Tourette published sixteen papers on hysteria, including:[3]
- Les actualités médicales, les états neurasthéniques (Paris 1898)
- Leçons de clinique thérapeutique sur les maladies du système nerveux (Paris 1898)
- L'hypnotisme et les états analogues au point de vue médico-légal (Paris, 1887; 2nd. edition Paris 1889)
- Les actualités médicales. Formes cliniques et traitement des myélites syphilitiques' convulsifs (La semaine médicale 1899)
- Traité clinique et thérapeutique de l'hystérie d'après l'enseignement de la Salpêtrière (Paris 1891)
See also
- Gabrielle Bompard – Accused murderer in the 1889 Gouffé Case
- Gouffé Case – 1889 French murder case
- Jules Liégeois – French jurist, academic, and founding member of the Nancy School of Hypnosis
- The Nancy School of Hypnosis – French school of psychotherapy from 1866
- Posthypnotic amnesia – Inability in hypnotic subjects to recall events that took place while under hypnosis
- The Salpêtrière School of Hypnosis – French school of psychotherapy from 1882