Frédéric Labadie-Lagrave

Frédéric Labadie-Lagrave (16 August 1844 – 1917) was a French physician who made important contributions to medical literature.

During the Franco-Prussian War, while still a resident, he saved a large convoy and was decorated on the battleground at Metz.

[1] With Germain Sée (1818–1896), Labadie-Lagrave wrote the multi-volume Médecine clinique, to which he made extensive contributions on urology and diseases of the liver, kidneys and bile ducts.

With Felix Legueu (1863–1939), he published Traité médico-chirurgical de gynécologie, an influential book on medical-surgical gynecology.

[citation needed] Labadie-Lagrave translated the first American treatise about neurology, W. A. Hammond's Diseases of the nervous system, C. A. Wunderlich's pioneer German book on body temperature Das Verhalten der Eigenwärme in Krankheiten and Siegmund Rosenstein's Die Pathologie und Therapie der Nierenkrankheiten.

Frédéric Labadie-Lagrave