HUTCHINSON, Sir Jonathan (1828 – 1913)
1828 – 1913
11 entries in the GMN corpus.
Image source Unknown author Unknown author · [1] · CC BY 4.0
1858 CE
#2386
Report on the effects of infantile syphilis in marring the development of the teeth.
Hutchinson of St. Bartholomew’s Hospital, is memorable for his original description of the notched incisors (“Hutchinson’s teeth”) in congenital syphilis. His name is also associated with &ldqu…
1874 CE
#3466
A successful case of abdominal section for intussusception.
In 1871 Hutchinson was the first successfully to operate on a case of intussusception in a two year-old infant. Preliminary account in Med. chir. Trans., 1876, 41 (2nd ser.), 99-102.
1875 CE–1888 CE
#4067
Illustrations of clinical surgery. 2 vols.
Vol. 1 pp. 49-52: Hutchinson’s classic description of cheiropompholyx, dysidrosis (“Hutchinson’s disease”). The first description and illustration of sarcoidosis is on p. 42.
1877 CE–1907 CE
#14349
An atlas of illustrations of pathology [and] An atlas of illustrations of clinical medicine, surgery and pathology ... a continuation of the "Atlas of Pathology." 30 fascicules numbered I - XXIV, XXIVbis, XXIVter, XXV, XXVbis, XXVI - XXVII.
1878 CE
#4074
Summer prurigo, prurigo aestivalis, seu prurigo adolescentium, seu acne-prurigo.
Hutchinson’s summer prurigo.
1879 CE
#4075
Lectures on clinical surgery. Pt. 2.
On p. 298 is the first description of hydradenitis destruens suppurativa, later named “Pollitzer’s disease” from the latter’s important description of it in J. cutan. gen.-urin. Dis., 1892, 10,…
1882 CE
#5439
On gangrenous eruptions in connection with vaccination and chickenpox.
Original description of varicella gangrenosa.
1886 CE
#3790
Congenital absence of hair and mammary glands with atrophic condition of the skin and its appendages in a boy whose mother had been almost wholly bald from alopecia areata from the age of six.
First description of progeria.
1889 CE–1890 CE
#4098
A rare form of lupus (marginatus).
“Hilliard’s lupus”. Hutchinson made an innovation in terminology when he named the disease after the patient instead of the physician describing it. The Archives, which ran to 11 volumes, were writte…
1891 CE–1892 CE
#4104
Infective angeioma or naevus-lupus.
Angioma serpiginosum.
1911 CE
#10794
The New Sydenham Society: Retrospective memoranda by Jonathan Hutchinson. Subject index and index of names compiled by Charles R. Hewitt.
Digital facsimile from the Internet Archive at this link.