Paul Oulmont (April 21, 1849 – November 3, 1917) was a French neurologist and a noted art collector.
He bestowed an important collection of drawings to his native town of Épinal.
[1] Oulmont received his medical degree in 1873 and was appointed Jean-Martin Charcot's house officer in 1877.
Although athetosis was known as "Hammond's disease," after William Alexander Hamilton ( 1828-1900), Oulmont presented a much earlier description written in 1853 by his mentor, Charcot, who classified the disorder as a form of chorea.
[2] Oulmont's name is associated with a number of disorders including diabetic neuropathy, Mercury toxicity in tics, and facial hemiplegia.