Sauveur François Morand

Sauveur François Morand (2 April 1697, Paris – 21 July 1773) was a French surgeon.

In 1724, he became a demonstrator of surgery at the Jardin du Roi in Paris, followed by service as censeur royal and a surgeon at the Hôpital de la Charité (from 1730).

[1] In 1729, while visiting St. Thomas's Hospital in London, he had the opportunity to learn William Cheselden's new procedure for stone cut, the lateral perineal lithotomy, a procedure that involved filling the bladder with water.

[5] In a 1766 treatise titled, "Sur un enfant auquel il manquoit les deux clavicules", etc., he was the first physician to describe cleidocranial dysostosis.

His son, Jean François-Clément Morand (1726-1784) taught classes in anatomy and obstetrics.

Sauveur François Morand (1697–1773)