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). 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.[8] 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,[9] 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.[9]
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.[10]
In 1893, a former female patient, who was later revealed to have psychosis, shot Gilles de la Tourette in the neck,[3][11][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.[12] His condition worsened and he was forced to resign.[4] His wife and colleagues were not forthcoming about the causes of his internment.[13] He died on 22 May 1904[3][4][13] 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.[13] Lees (2019) states that "Gilles de la Tourette died of general paralysis of the insane (neurosyphilis)".[9]
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)
Notes
^Some older sources state that he was shot in the head;[12] Walusinski (2019) describes the neck wound in detail.[11]
^Walusinski (2019), pp. xi, 398. "Interne: House physician or house officer. The internes lived at the hospital and had diagnostic and therapeutic responsibilities. Chef de Clinique: Senior house officer or resident. In 1889, when Gilles de la Tourette was chef de clinique under Charcot ... "
^Dana CL, Wilkin WP (1886). "On convulsive tic with explosive disturbances of speech (So-called Gilles de la Tourette's Disease)". The Journal of Nervous and Mental Disease. 13 (7): 407–412. doi:10.1097/00005053-188607000-00004. S2CID145727765.