Eugène Apert

French pediatrician
The basics

Quick Facts

IntroFrench pediatrician
PlacesFrance
wasPhysician
Work fieldHealthcare
Gender
Male
Birth27 July 1868
Death2 February 1940 (aged 71 years)
The details

Biography

Eugène Charles Apert (27 July 1868 – 2 February 1940) was a French pediatrician born in Paris.
He received his doctorate in 1897 and afterwards was associated with the Hôtel-Dieu and Hôpital Saint-Louis. From 1919 until 1934, he worked at the Hôpital des Enfants-Malades in Paris. Pediatrician Jacques-Joseph Grancher (1843–1907) and surgeon Paul Georges Dieulafoy (1839–1911) were important influences to his career. He was also a student of pediatrician Antoine Bernard-Jean Marfan (1858–1942) and collaborated with dermatologist François Henri Hallopeau (1842–1919).
Apert's medical research primarily dealt with genetic diseases and congenital abnormalities. In 1906 he published a case report, titled De l'acrocéphalosyndactylie, documenting several individuals who had congenital malformations of the skull in conjunction with joined fingers. The condition came to be known as "Apert syndrome", a syndrome consisting of a triad of disorders, namely craniosynostosis, syndactyly and maxillary underdevelopment.
Apert was the author of many works in the field of pediatrics, including an influential manual on child rearing. He was a founding member of the French Society of Eugenics.

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