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{{Use mdy dates|date=October 2016}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=October 2016}}
{{Infobox person
{{Orphan|date=May 2015}}
| name = Pierre-Victor Galtier
| image = Buste de Pierre Victor Galtier.jpg
| alt =
| caption = Bust of Pierre-Victor Galtier
| birth_date = {{Birth date|df=yes|1846|10|15}}
| birth_place = [[Langogne]], Lozère
| death_date = {{Death date and age|df=yes|1908|04|24|1846|10|15}}
| death_place = [[La Mulatière]]
| nationality = [[France|French]]
| occupation = Veterinarian
| years_active =
| known_for = Research into the rabies virus
| notable_works =
}}
'''Pierre-Victor''' or '''Pierre Victor Galtier''' ({{birth date|1846|10|15|df=yes}} – {{death date|1908|04|24|df=yes}}) was a [[veterinarian]] and professor at the {{ill|National Veterinary School of Lyon|fr|École nationale vétérinaire de Lyon}}, specialising in [[pathology]] of infectious diseases, health surveillance and commercial and medical legislation. He developed a [[rabies vaccine]] which had some experimental success in laboratory animals.


== Early life and studies ==
{{Rough translation|fr|Pierre Victor Galtier}}
Galtier was born on 15 October 1846 in [[Langogne]], [[Lozère]] to a farmer's family.{{sfn|Théodoridès|1986|p=189}} In 1853, he was entrusted to the nuns who ran the local school. He escaped from this school twice, only to be placed with his grandmother who lived in Langogne. There, he attended secondary school, leaving after the tenth grade.
'''Pierre-Victor''' or '''Pierre Victor Galtier''' ({{birth date|1846|10|15}} in [[Langogne]], Lozère – {{death date|1908|04|24}} in [[La Mulatière]] near [[Lyon]]) was a [[veterinarian]] and professor of pathology of infectious diseases, animal health and commercial and medical legislation at the [[Veterinary School of Lyon]]. He developed a rabies vaccine for laboratory animals which had some experimental success.


He read [[Greco-Roman world|Greco-Roman]] studies at [[La Chapelle-Saint-Mesmin]] in the "Petit Séminaire", the famous ecclesiastical secondary school of Bishop [[Felix Dupanloup]], an outpost of the [[Seminar d'Orléans]]. He received his bachelor's degree with honours.
== Biography ==


He studied for his master's degree and his veterinary license at [[Marvejols college]]. Around this time [[Lozère]] created a scholarship to help poor students to study to become veterinarians, which Galtier received and used to study at the {{interlanguage link|National Veterinary School of Lyon|fr|École nationale vétérinaire de Lyon}}. He came top of the class for four consecutive years, and graduated in 1873 as a [[valedictorian]], receiving the "''{{lang|fr|Grand prix Bourgelat}}''".
=== Early life and studies ===
Galtier was born in 1846 in [[Langogne]] to parents of low birth. In 1853, he was entrusted to the nuns who ran the local school. He escaped from this school twice, only to be placed with his grandmother who lived in Langogne. There, he attended secondary school, leaving after the tenth grade.

He read [[Graeco-Roman studies]] at [[La Chapelle-Saint-Mesmin]] in the "Petit Séminaire", the famous ecclesiastical secondary school of Bishop [[Felix Dupanloup]], an outpost of the [[Seminar d'Orléans]]. He received his bachelor's degree with honours.

He studied for his Master's degree and his veterinary license at [[Marvejols college]]. Around this time [[Lozère]] created a scholarship to help poor students to study to become veterinarians, which Galtier received and used to study at the [[École Vétérinaire de Lyon]]. He came top of the class for four consecutive years, and graduated in 1873 as a [[valedictorian]], receiving the "Bourgelat Grand Prize".


== Career ==
== Career ==
Galtier began his professional career as an associate of Monsieur Delorme, a veterinarian in [[Arles]], whose daughter he married. He began teaching veterinary pathology and eventually became the Chair of Infectious Diseases. Aged 33, he began his work on rabies.
Galtier began his professional career as an associate of Monsieur Delorme, a veterinarian in [[Arles]], whose daughter he married. He began teaching veterinary pathology and eventually became the Chair of Infectious Diseases. Aged 33, he began his work on rabies.


In 1876, he was appoined the Chair of Pathology and Internal Medicine in the veterinary science department at Lyon. In 1877, his department began to carry out studies on microbial pathology and microbiology. This led to the school supporting the idea of [[contagious diseases]] such as [[tuberculosis]], the [[common cold]], and [[rabies]], as opposed to the [[Alfort School]] which supported the idea of [[spontaneous generation]].
In 1876, he was appointed the Chair of Pathology and Internal Medicine in the veterinary science department at Lyon. In 1877, his department began to carry out studies on microbial pathology and [[microbiology]]. This led to the school supporting the idea of [[contagious diseases]] such as [[tuberculosis]], the [[common cold]], and [[rabies]], as opposed to the [[National Veterinary School of Alfort]] which supported the idea of [[spontaneous generation]].


In 1878 he was appointed professor of pathology of infectious diseases, animal health, trade and medical law. In the same year, Mr. Bouley, Inspector General of veterinary schools, creates a new department that would separate the teaching of general pathology from that of communicable diseases. Pierre Victor Galtier was appointed to the department chair and held the position for 30 years.
In 1878 he was appointed professor of pathology of infectious diseases, animal health, trade and medical law. In the same year, Mr. Bouley, Inspector General of veterinary schools, created a new department that would separate the teaching of general pathology from that of communicable diseases. Pierre Victor Galtier was appointed to the department chair and held the position for 30 years.


In 1879, he made important discoveries about two deadly diseases: [[common cold]] and [[rabies]]. In 1883, he obtained a law degree.
In 1879, he made important discoveries about two deadly diseases: [[common cold]] and [[rabies]]. In 1883, he obtained a law degree.


Galtier was nominated for the Nobel Prize for his work on rabies. But he died in 1908, just before the prizewinner was chosen, so it was awarded instead to [[Paul Ehrlich]] and [[Ilya Ilyich Mechnikov]].<ref>{{cite book|first=Jean|last=Théodoridès|title=Histoire de la rage&nbsp;– cave canem|language=fr|trans-title=History of Rabies: Beware of the Dog|publisher=Masson|year=1986|chapter=VI}}</ref><ref name = "Life_Galtier">{{cite web|url=http://membres.lycos.fr/zeb/indexrage.html|title=Life Galtier|language=fr}}</ref>
For his work on rabies, Galtier was considered for the 1908 [[Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine]]. However, he died in [[La Mulatière]] on 24 April 1908, thereby preventing his nomination.{{sfn|Théodoridès|1986|loc=VI: Les recherches de Galtier (1879–1904)}}<ref>{{cite book |title=L'Histoire des Vaccinations |language=fr |trans-title=Vaccination, a History |first=Hervé |last=Bazin |chapter=Un survol de quelques protagonistes de cette histoire |date=2008 |place=Montrouge |publisher=John Libbey |pages=400–401 |chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=NSHXLkgFBBQC&pg=PA400}}</ref>


== Titles and honors ==
== Honors ==
* 1881: Member of the Anthropological Society of Lyon
* 1881: Member of the Anthropological Society of Lyon
* 1887: Member of the National Agricultural Society, natural history and useful Arts de Lyo
* 1887: Member of the National Agricultural Society, natural history and useful Arts de Lyon
* 1888: Officer Academy
* 1888: Officer Academy
* 1891: Knight [[Legion of Honor]]
* 1891: Knight [[Legion of Honor]]
Line 34: Line 44:
* 1898: Correspondent of the National Society of Agriculture
* 1898: Correspondent of the National Society of Agriculture
* 1898: Associate of the National Central Society of Veterinary Medicine Associate
* 1898: Associate of the National Central Society of Veterinary Medicine Associate
* 1901: Elected Associate of the National Academy of Medicine, by 56 votes out of 59
* 1901: Elected Associate of the {{lang|fr|[[Académie nationale de médecine]]}}, by 56 votes out of 59
* 1903: Appointed Commander of Agricultural Merit
* 1903: Appointed Commander of Agricultural Merit
* 1903–08: Member of the Veterinary Academy of France
* 1903–08: Member of the Veterinary Academy of France
* 1903: Member of the Rhône hygiene County Council
* 1903: Member of the Rhône Hygiene County Council
* 1906: Appointed officer of Education
* 1906: Appointed Officer of Education
** Member of the Rhone vaccines commission
** Member of the Rhone vaccines commission
** Four gold medals with the effigy of Olivier de Serres (works on rabies, pneumo-enteritis in sheep and horse and tuberculosis) Agricultural Society of France
** Four gold medals with the effigy of Olivier de Serres (works on rabies, pneumo-enteritis in sheep and horse and [[tuberculosis]]) Agricultural Society of France
* 1887: [[Bréant Prize]] (for his work on rabies)<ref>Proceedings of the Academy of Sciences, 1887, Vol 105, session of December 26, 1887</ref>
* 1887: [[Bréant Prize]] (for his work on rabies)<ref>Proceedings of the Academy of Sciences, 1887, Vol 105, session of 26 December 1887</ref>
* 1887: [[Barbier Prize]] (for his work on rabies). Academy of Medicine, contests
* 1887: Barbier Prize {{lang-fr|Prix Barbier}} (for his work on rabies). Academy of Medicine, contests
* 1890: [[Behague Prize]] of the National Society of Agriculture of France for his work on the pneumo-enteritis in sheep (June 25 )
* 1890: [[Behague Prize]] of the National Society of Agriculture of France for his work on the pneumo-enteritis in sheep (25 June)
* 1891: Barbier Prize (for his work on the pneumo-enteritis cheeses)
* 1891: Barbier Prize (for his work on pneumo-enteritis from cheeses)
* 1892: [[Stanski Prize]] (for the second edition of contagious diseases
* 1892: [[Gaétan-Pierre Stanski|Stanski Prize]] (for the second edition of contagious diseases)


== Work ==
== Work on rabies ==
Pierre Galtier was distinguished for his work on [[rabies]]. He was the first to develop a vaccine for rabies. He also made important advances in the study of the [[common cold]] and on the infectiousness of viruses.
Pierre Galtier was notable for his work on [[rabies]]; he was the first to develop a vaccine for rabies. He also made important advances in the study of the [[common cold]] and on the infectiousness of viruses.


Galtier assumes that, because of the [[incubation period]] of rabies, the development of a vaccine could be used as curative for a disease like this.<ref name = "Life Galtier" />
Galtier assumed that, because of the [[incubation period]] of rabies, the development of a vaccine could be used as curative for a disease like this.<ref name="Life_Galtier">{{cite web|url=http://membres.lycos.fr/zeb/indexrage.html|title=Life Galtier|language=fr|url-status=dead|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090530121255/http://membres.lycos.fr/zeb/indexrage.html|archive-date=30 May 2009|df=dmy-all}}</ref>


=== 1879 ===
=== 1879 ===
His first publication on rabies is a thesis entitled "Studies on rabies" published in two veterinary journals<ref>Pierre Galtier, studies on rabies Rec. Med. Vet, 1879, 6, {2} {E} series, No. 17, pp 857–867.</ref> {{,}} <ref>Pierre Galtier, Studies on rabies, Ann. Med. Vet., 1879 28, p. 627-639.</ref> {{,}}<ref>Jean Théodoridès, History of rabies, ed. Masson, 1986, p. 190.</ref> and whose findings are published in the Proceedings of the Academy of Sciences.
His first publication on rabies was a thesis entitled "Studies on rabies" published in two veterinary journals<ref>Pierre Galtier, studies on rabies Rec. Med. Vet, 1879, 6, {2} {E} series, No. 17, pp 857–867.</ref><ref>Pierre Galtier, Studies on rabies, Ann. Med. Vet., 1879 28, p. 627-639.</ref>{{sfn|Théodoridès|1986|p=190}} and whose findings are published in the Proceedings of the Academy of Sciences.


On April 25, 1879, the Academy of Sciences published his notes on rabies.<ref>Pierre Galtier, studies on rabies (Presented by Mr. Bouley), Proceedings of the Academy of Sciences 1879, Volume 89, August 25, 1879, p. 444-446.</ref>
On 25 April 1879, the Academy of Sciences published his notes on rabies.<ref>Pierre Galtier, studies on rabies (Presented by Mr. Bouley), Proceedings of the Academy of Sciences 1879, Volume 89, 25 August 1879, p. 444-446.</ref>


The article made clear his conclusions about rabies:
The article made clear his conclusions about rabies:
<blockquote>
<blockquote>
"1. The dog rabies is transmitted to the rabbit, which thus becomes a convenient and safe reagent to determine the status of non-virulence or virulence of various liquids from rabid animals (...)
# The dog rabies is transmitted to the rabbit, which thus becomes a convenient and safe reagent to determine the status of non-virulence or virulence of various liquids from rabid animals ()
# Rabies is transmitted to animals (rabbits) of his kind (…)

2. Rabies is transmitted to animals (rabbits) of his kind (...)
# Symptoms that predominate in the rabid rabbits are paralysis and convulsions.
# The rabbit can live from several hours to one, two and even four days after the disease has clearly declared.

# (…) the incubation period{{efn|That is to say, the incubation period for rabies.}} is shorter in him than in other species. (Based on an experience table published in the note, Galtier accurately and correctly calculates an average incubation time for the rabbit 18 days).
3. Symptoms that predominate in the rabid rabbits are paralysis and convulsions.
# Salicylic acid, administered by hypodermic injection, the daily dose of 0.0068 gr for fourteen consecutive days from the fiftieth hour after [[inoculation]], did not prevent the development of rabies the rabbit.

# The saliva of rabid dog, collected on the living animal and stored in the water is still virulent five, fourteen twenty-four hours.
4. The rabbit can live from several hours to one, two and even four days after the disease has clearly declared.

5. (...) the incubation period <ref>That is to say, the incubation period for rabies.</ref> is shorter in him than in other species. (Based on an experience table published in the note, Galtier accurately and correctly calculates an average incubation time for the rabbit 18 days).

6. Salicylic acid, administered by hypodermic injection, the daily dose of 0.0068 gr for fourteen consecutive days from the fiftieth hour after [[inoculation]], did not prevent the development of rabies the rabbit.

7. The saliva of rabid dog, collected on the living animal and stored in the water is still virulent five, fourteen twenty-four hours. (...) "
</blockquote>
</blockquote>


Galtier also has a brilliant idea: he began experiments to find an agent capable of neutralizing rabies virus. He thinks that the discovery of an effective preventive means almost equivalent to the discovery of a cure, especially if his action was really effective, a day or two after the bite after virus inoculation.<ref name = "Life Galtier"/> It is this 'genius idea which is the basis of preventive treatment for rabies by vaccination'.
Galtier also had a brilliant idea: he began experiments to find an agent capable of neutralizing rabies virus. He thought that the discovery of an effective preventive was almost equivalent to the discovery of a cure, especially if it was effective when administered within a day or two of an infected bite.<ref name = "Life_Galtier"/> It is this 'genius idea which is the basis of preventive treatment for rabies by vaccination'.


=== 1880 ===
=== 1880 ===
In 1880, Galtier publishes a "Treaty of contagious diseases" which contains a chapter on rabies.<ref>This book will have three editions: in 1880, 1891, 1897</ref>
In 1880, Galtier published a "Treaty of contagious diseases" which contains a chapter on rabies.{{efn|This book had three editions: in 1880, 1891, 1897.}}


It is in this book that he wrote this sentence summarizing his first observations on immunity to rabies: "Rabies virus injected directly into the blood stream is ineffective, at least this is what I found in several experiences where I had injected into the jugular vein of the sheep a large amount of rabid drool ".<ref>in Jean Théodoridès, History of rabies.&nbsp;– Canem cellar, ed. Masson, 1986, p 191.</ref> His remarkable experiences will be published in several articles the following year.
In this book, he wrote this sentence summarizing his first observations on immunity to rabies: "Rabies virus injected directly into the blood stream is ineffective, at least this is what I found in several experiences where I had injected into the jugular vein of the sheep a large amount of rabid drool".{{sfn|Théodoridès|1986|p=191}} His experiments were published in several articles the following year.


Also in 1880, [[Louis Pasteur]] became interested to rabies, as evidenced by one of his communications. It takes note of the work of Galtier, he regards with a certain disdain, thinking that these experiences "not possible to bring, let alone identify the disease [...]".
Also in 1880, [[Louis Pasteur]] became interested in rabies and took note of Galtier's work, regarding him with a certain disdain, stating that these experiments "do not make it possible to reconicle, let alone identify the disease [] as rabies". Pasteur often denigrated his predecessors before taking over their work, and the credit for it; he also did this with [[Jean Joseph Henri Toussaint|Henri Toussaint]] and [[Antoine Béchamp]].

This attitude of Louis Pasteur is common: it denigrates precursors to take over their work and then take credit for ... (see [[Toussaint Henry]], [[Antoine Béchamp]])


=== 1881 ===
=== 1881 ===
In August 1881, Galtier sends a note to the Academy of Sciences.<ref>Pierre Galtier, rabies injections into the circulation do not cause the outbreak of rabies and appear to confer immunity . Rabies can be transmitted by ingestion of the rabies material (Presented by Mr. Bouley), Proceedings of the Academy of Sciences, 1881, Volume 93, August 1, 1881, pp 284–285.</ref> He shall note his experiences intravenous inoculation of the rabies virus in the bloodstream.
In August 1881, Galtier sent a note to the Academy of Sciences.<ref>Pierre Galtier, rabies injections into the circulation do not cause the outbreak of rabies and appear to confer immunity. Rabies can be transmitted by ingestion of the rabies material (Presented by Mr. Bouley), Proceedings of the Academy of Sciences, 1881, Volume 93, 1 August 1881, pp 284–285.</ref> He noted his experiences of the intravenous inoculation of the rabies virus in the bloodstream.


He writes that:
He wrote:
<blockquote>
<blockquote>
"The findings that emerge from these facts are the following:
The findings that emerge from these facts are the following:
# Injections of rabies virus into the veins of the sheep do not cause rabies and seem to confer immunity.

# Rabies can be transmitted by injection of the rabies material.
1. Injections of rabies virus in the veins of the sheep do not show rage and seem to confer immunity.

2 °. Rabies can be transmitted by injection of the rabies matter "
</blockquote>
</blockquote>
So he found a way to provide immunity against rabies on the sheep.


He also published in the bulletin of the Academy of Medicine <ref>Pierre Galtier, Transmission of rabies virus, Bull Acad. Med, 1881 {2} {e} series, Volume 10, pp 90–94 (quote taken from the book Antonio Cadeddu, The truths of science&nbsp;– Convenient, story, story. Pastor cases ed Leo S. Olschki. , p 155)</ref> and writes inter alia that:. "I injected seven times the rabies saliva into the jugular sheep and never seen rage, one of my test subjects was successively inoculated with drooling a mad dog, after four months that this inoculation was made, the animal is alive and well; he seems to have acquired immunity. I inoculated a fortnight by putting eight cubic centimeters of saliva rabies in the peritoneum; it always goes very well; I would do next him another inoculation. "
This method provided immunity against rabies in sheep. In the Bulletin of the Academy of Medicine, he wrote: "I injected the rabies saliva into the jugular vein of sheep seven times, and never saw rabies, one of my test subjects was successively inoculated with saliva from a rabid dog, four months after this inoculation, the animal is alive and well; he seems to have acquired immunity. I inoculated him for another fortnight by putting eight cubic centimeters of rabid saliva in the peritoneum; it always went very well; then I would administer him another inoculation."<ref>Pierre Galtier, Transmission of rabies virus, Bull Acad. Med, 1881 {2} {e} series, Volume 10, pp 90–94 (quote taken from {{cite book|last1=Cadeddu|first1=Antonio|title=Les vérités de la science : pratique, récit, histoire ; le cas Pasteur|date=2005|publisher=Olschki|location=Firenze|isbn=9788822254641|page=155|language=fr}})</ref>


For the science historian Jean Théodoridès, this is the first time in the history of medicine that can emit the idea of immunization against rabies with convincing experimental results to the key.<ref name = "Théodoridès "/>
According to the science historian Jean Théodoridès, this is the first time in the history of medicine that the idea of immunization against rabies was supported by convincing experimental results.{{sfn|Théodoridès|1986|p=214}}


=== 1882 ===
=== 1882 ===
This year Galtier remark that "intravenous inoculation is ineffective. [But] immunity follows, in sheep, this inoculation "and notes the absence of virus in the nerve centers.
Galtier remarked "intravenous inoculation is ineffective. [But] immunity follows this inoculation in sheep", and he noted the absence of virus in the nerve centers.


This last point drew the attention of [[Louis Pasteur]] who sees a lack of sensitivity due to the subcutaneous inoculation technique. He developed with his student [[Émile Roux|Emile Roux]], intracranial inoculation dog trepanation. Thus it happens to isolate the virus in the nerve centers and urge the notion of neuroprobasie (neurons are the cells of the body most sensitive to rabies virus). As a result, the virus will develop there preferably, causing a spread of the virus through nerve pathways of the peripheral inoculation point to the brain).
This last point drew the attention of [[Louis Pasteur]] who saw a lack of sensitivity due to the subcutaneous inoculation technique. With his student [[Pierre Paul Émile Roux|Émile Roux]], Pasteur developed an intracranial inoculation, by [[trepanning]] the skull of a dog. This isolated the virus in the nerve centers, and supported the idea that rabies is [[neurotropic virus|neurotropic]], meaning that the virus preferentially develops in nerve cells, and spreads through nerve pathways from the peripheral inoculation point to the brain.


=== 1883 ===
=== 1883 ===
In 1883, [[Émile Roux|Emile Roux]] published his medical doctorate thesis on "New acquisitions on rabies." According to Jean Théodoridès,<ref>Jean Théodoridès, History of rabies&nbsp;– Canem cellar, ed. Masson, 1986, p 212-213.</ref> which strikes at first in this paper written by Roux with care and method is the frequent mention of the work of Galtier cities from coast to coast. While [[Louis Pasteur]] refers only very incidentally Galtier.<ref>Jean Théodoridès, History of rabies&nbsp;– Canem cellar, ed. Masson, 1986, p 213.</ref>
In 1883, [[Pierre Paul Émile Roux|Émile Roux]] published his medical doctorate thesis on "New acquisitions on rabies." According to Jean Théodoridès,{{sfn|Théodoridès|1986|pp=212-213}} the most striking thing about Roux's thesis is the frequent mention of the work of Galtier, whereas Pasteur referred to Galtier only incidentally.{{sfn|Théodoridès|1986|p=213}}


=== 1886 ===
=== 1886 ===
He published in 1886 an important book on rabies, "The proposed rabies in animals and humans in view of its characters and its prophylaxis."
In 1886, Galtier published an important book on rabies, ''Rabies considered in animals and humans from the point of view of its character and its prophylaxis'' ({{lang-fr|La rage envisagée chez les animaux et chez l'homme au point de vue de ses caractères et de sa prophylaxie}}). It discussed:{{sfn|Théodoridès|1986|p=214}}


*Symptoms
There exposes:<ref name = "Théodoridès" />
*Curability
*Cause, proving the lack of "spontaneous" rabies, and concluding that "contagion is the only cause that can cause rabies in animals of any kind."
*Transmission of rabies between different animals
*Experimental methods of transmission of rabies by bites


It reviewed Galtier's research of 1879–1881, and reported that research was continuing as of 1886 (the date of publication of the book).{{sfn|Théodoridès|1986|p=214}}
– The symptoms of diseases <br />
– <br /> Curability
– Aetiology where it shows, once and for all, the lack of rabies "spontaneous" and concludes that "Contagion is the only cause that can reveal rabies in animals of any kind." <br />
– Transferability of rabies in different animals <br />
– Experimental modes of transmission of rabies by bites


The book also dealt with health measures and forensics, dog control measures (wearing the collar, a muzzle, leash).{{sfn|Théodoridès|1986|p=214}}
It recalls its 1879–1881 research and reports that he has continued until 1886 (date of publication of this book).<ref name = "Théodoridès" />

The book also deals with health measures and forensics, dog control measures (wearing the collar, a muzzle, leash).<ref name = "Théodoridès" />


=== 1887 ===
=== 1887 ===
In 1887, he received the Barber Award for his work on rabies.
In 1887, Galtier received the Barbier Prize (''{{lang-fr|Prix Barbier}}'') from the {{lang|fr|[[Académie nationale de médecine]]}} for his work on rabies.


In its report on the Barber Award to Pierre Galtier by the Academy of Medicine, [[Edmond Nocard]] wrote: "The discovery of Mr. Galtier, therefore, has a high importance not only from the scientific point of view but also in practical point of view; it is hoped that it will soon lead to the establishment of a simple, convenient and efficient, allowing to save as many animals bitten. ".<ref>In Théodoridès Jean, The history of rabies: Canem cellar, ed. Masson, 1986, p 197-198.</ref>
In its report on awarding the Barbier Prize to Galtier, [[Edmond Nocard]] wrote: "The discovery of Mr. Galtier, therefore, has a high importance not only from the scientific point of view but also in practical point of view; it is hoped that it will soon lead to the establishment of a simple, practical and effective treatment, saving the largest number of bitten animals."{{sfn|Théodoridès|1986|pp=197-198}}


The same year, he received the Bréant Price of the Academy of Sciences (December 1887) for his book on rabies. [[Charles Jacques Bouchard|Bouchard]], on behalf of the Commission consisting of [[Étienne-Jules Marey|Marey]], [[Jean-Martin Charcot|Charcot]], [[Charles Édouard Brown-Sequard|Brown- Séquard]] and [[Aristide Auguste Stanislas Verneuil|Verneuil]] emphasized the importance of the work of several years preceding those of [[Louis Pasteur]].<ref>In Théodoridès Jean, The history rabies: Canem cellar, ed. Masson, 1986, p 198.</ref>
The same year, he received the Bréant Price of the Academy of Sciences (December 1887) for his book on rabies. [[Charles Jacques Bouchard|Bouchard]], on behalf of the Commission consisting of [[Étienne-Jules Marey|Marey]], [[Jean-Martin Charcot|Charcot]], [[Charles Édouard Brown-Sequard|Brown- Séquard]] and [[Aristide Auguste Stanislas Verneuil|Verneuil]] emphasized the importance of the work of several years preceding those of [[Louis Pasteur]].{{sfn|Théodoridès|1986|p=198}}


=== 1888 ===
=== 1888 ===
On January 30, 1888, Pierre Galtier published an article in the Proceedings of the Academy of Sciences.<ref>Pierre Galtier, Persistence of rabies virulence in buried corpses (Presented by Mr. Chauveau), Proceedings Academy of Sciences, 1888, Vol 106, pp 364–366.</ref> He insists that "the rabies virus retains its activity in buried corpses, so that when doubts arise afterwards about the nature of the disease that has determined the death, exhumation, and inoculation of the bulb are naturally indicated ".<ref>Pierre Galtier, Persistence of rabid virulence in buried corpses (Presented by Mr. Chauveau), Proceedings of the Academy of Science, 1888, vol 106, p 364.</ref>
On 30 January 1888, Galtier published an article in the Proceedings of the Academy of Sciences.<ref>Pierre Galtier, Persistence of rabies virulence in buried corpses (Presented by Mr. [[Auguste Chauveau|Chauveau]]), Proceedings Academy of Sciences, 1888, Vol 106, pp 364–366.</ref> He insisted that "the rabies virus retains its activity in buried corpses, so that when doubts arise afterwards about the nature of the disease that caused the death, exhumation, and inoculation of the bulb are naturally indicated".<ref>Pierre Galtier, Persistence of rabid virulence in buried corpses (Presented by Mr. Chauveau), Proceedings of the Academy of Science, 1888, vol 106, p 364.</ref>


For Galtier (recall that Professor veterinary, medical law and contagious diseases), the consequence of the persistence of the rabies virus is "And in prophylaxis issues to establish when, in forensic issues and in proceedings brought by the owners responsibility, there will be doubts about the nature of the disease, it will be appropriate to request the exhumation of a body not only to the autopsy, which often has been already practiced, but mostly to proceed with the inoculation of the bulb ".<ref>Pierre Galtier, Persistence of rabid virulence in buried corpses (Presented by Mr. Chauveau), Proceedings of the Academy of Science, 1888, vol 106, p 366 .</ref>
For Galtier (a veterinary professor, qualified in medical law and contagious diseases), the consequence of the persistence of the rabies virus meant that, in cases of question of the liability of animal owners, corpses could be exhumed to confirm a diagnosis of rabies.<ref>Pierre Galtier, Persistence of rabid virulence in buried corpses (Presented by Mr. Chauveau), Proceedings of the Academy of Science, 1888, vol 106, p 366 .</ref>


On April 16, 1888, he again sends a note.<ref>Pierre Galtier, News rabies inoculation experiments to preserve herbivorous animals from rabies after rabid dog bites (Presented by Mr. Chauveau), Proceedings of the Academy of Sciences, 1888, Vol 106, pp 1189- 1191.</ref> He recalled his experiences in 1880–1881 showing that injection of the rabies virus in the veins of sheep and goats did not give them the disease but confers immunity against rabies <ref>Pierre Galtier, News rabies inoculation experiments to preserve herbivorous animals from rabies following bites from rabid dogs (Presented by M. Chauveau, Proceedings of the Academy of Sciences, 1888 Volume 106, pp 1189- 1190</ref> He also noted that research was done in 1884 by [[Edmond Nocard]] and.. [[Émile Roux|Emile Roux]] confirmed the validity of deductions.<ref>Edmond Nocard and Emile Roux, Experiments on the vaccination of ruminants against rabies by intravenous injections of the rabies virus, Ann. Inst. Pasteur, 1887, 1, p 341-353.</ref> These authors note the intravenous injection method can prevent rabies after inoculation in the eye and rabies after animal bite.<ref name = "Théodoridès">Jean Théodoridès, History of rabies&nbsp;– Canem cellar, ed. Masson, 1986, p 214.</ref>
On 16 April 1888, he again sent a note.<ref>Pierre Galtier, News rabies inoculation experiments to preserve herbivorous animals from rabies after rabid dog bites (Presented by Mr. Chauveau), Proceedings of the Academy of Sciences, 1888, Vol 106, pp 1189–1191.</ref> He recalled his experiences in 1880–1881 showing that injection of the rabies virus in the veins of sheep and goats did not cause rabies, but instead conferred immunity.<ref>Pierre Galtier, News rabies inoculation experiments to preserve herbivorous animals from rabies following bites from rabid dogs (Presented by M. Chauveau, Proceedings of the Academy of Sciences, 1888 Volume 106, pp 1189-1190</ref> He noted that research in 1884 by [[Edmond Nocard]] and [[Émile Roux|Emile Roux]] confirmed the validity of these deductions.<ref name="Nocard 1887">{{cite journal|last1=Nocard|first1=Edmond|last2=Roux|first2=Emile|authorlink1=Edmond Nocard|authorlink2=Pierre Paul Émile Roux|title=Expériences sur la vaccination des ruminants contre la rage par injections intraveineuses de virus rabique|journal=Annales de l'Institut Pasteur|date=1887|volume=1|pages=341–353|trans-title=Experiments on the vaccination of ruminants against rabies by intravenous injections of the rabies virus|language=fr|issn=0020-2444}}</ref> These authors noted that intravenous injection can prevent rabies after inoculation into the eye, and after the bite of a rabid animal.{{sfn|Théodoridès|1986|p=214}}


In his article, Galtier also relates his experiments on sheep and sheep.
In his article, Galtier also related his experiments on sheep.


=== 1891 ===
=== 1891 ===
In 1891 appears the second edition of his "Treaty of contagious diseases." Galtier It says that is deeply disappointed, even ulcerated<ref>Pierre Galtier, Treaty of infectious diseases, 1891, vol. 2, 141.</ref> negative remarks of [[Louis Pasteur]] about his research. This, supposedly, are not found in dogs acquired immunity in sheep and goats following intravenous injection of rabies.<ref>Jean Théodoridès, History of rabies&nbsp;– Canem cellar, ed. Masson, 1986, p 198.</ref> While [[Edmond Nocard]] and [[Émile Roux|Emile Roux]] confirmed in 1888 (see above) by their own experiences in 1884 Galtier that the experiments had made 1881.<ref name = "Théodoridès" />
The second edition of Galtier's ''On Contagious Diseases'' was published in 1891. Galtier was disappointed, to the point of physical pain,<ref>Pierre Galtier, Treaty of infectious diseases, 1891, vol. 2, 141.</ref> by the negative remarks from [[Louis Pasteur]] about his research. Pateur stated that dogs did not acquire immunity, as Galtier found in sheep and goats, following intravenous injection of rabies.{{sfn|Théodoridès|1986|p=198}} However, [[Edmond Nocard]] and [[Émile Roux|Emile Roux]] had already confirmed in 1888 that their experiments of 1884 had confirmed Galtier's experiments of 1881.{{sfn|Théodoridès|1986|p=214}}


=== 1904 ===
=== 1904 ===
At that time Galtier has lost four of his eight children and his wife, and is strongly discouraged.<ref name = "Life Galtier" />
In 1904, Galtier lost four of his eight children and his wife, and was strongly discouraged.<ref name = "Life_Galtier" />


However, published in 1904, an article he titled "Pages of history"<ref>Pierre Galtier, A page of history. Discovery of rabies immunity. Rabies vaccination by intravenous, J. Med. Vet. Zool (Lyon), 1904, 55, pp 274–277</ref> and in which he wrote: "... I had studied the first, from 1879-80-81, the effects of intravenous injection of rabies virus. I was the first demonstrated in the most peremptory manner, its safety in herbivorous animals and immunizing action. I established the first before there was any question of vaccination by Pastor process or other, that immunity against the deadly rage could be granted to certain animals by a particular method of inoculation ... .DES 1881 j 'had shown that the virus injections into the veins of sheep and goats do not show rage and confer immunity ... ".
He published an article entitled "Pages of history"<ref>Pierre Galtier, A page of history. Discovery of rabies immunity. Rabies vaccination by intravenous, J. Med. Vet. Zool (Lyon), 1904, 55, pp 274–277</ref> in which he wrote: " I had studied first, from 1879-80-81, the effects of intravenous injection of the rabies virus. I was the first to demonstrate, in the most peremptory manner, its safety in herbivorous animals, and immunizing action. I established this first, before there was any thought of vaccination Pasteur or any others, that immunity against deadly rabies could be granted to certain animals by a particular method of inoculation From 1881 onward, I had shown that virus injected into the veins of sheep and goats does not cause rabies, but confers immunity".


In this article, he claims his priority in the demonstration of the possibility of getting rabies immunization, stressing that the results achieved in small ruminants (sheep, goat) were confirmed by [[Edmond Nocard]] and [[Emile Roux]] in 1888<ref>Edmond Nocard and Emile Roux, Experiments on the vaccination of ruminants against rabies by intravenous injections of the rabies virus, Ann. Inst. Shepherd, 1888 2, p 341-353</ref> {{,}}.<ref>Jean Théodoridès, History of rabies&nbsp;– Canem cellar, ed. Masson, 1986, p 197.</ref>
In this article, he promoted is pioneering rabies immunizations, stressing that the results achieved in small ruminants (sheep and goats) were confirmed by [[Edmond Nocard]] and [[Emile Roux]] in 1888.<ref name="Nocard 1888">{{cite journal|last1=Nocard|first1=Edmond|last2=Roux|first2=Emile|authorlink1=Edmond Nocard|authorlink2=Pierre Paul Émile Roux|title=Expériences sur la vaccination des ruminants contre la rage par injections intraveineuses de virus rabique|journal=Annales de l'Institut Pasteur|date=1888|volume=2|pages=341–353|trans-title=Experiments on the vaccination of ruminants against rabies by intravenous injections of the rabies virus|language=fr|issn=0020-2444}}</ref>{{sfn|Théodoridès|1986|p=197}}


=== 1907 ===
=== 1907 ===
In 1907, Galtier receives significant token of esteem from the [[Karolinska Institute]] of [[Stockholm]] who asked him to send all his work on rabies to offer his candidacy Nobel Prize of [[physiology]] and medicine for the year 1908.<ref>Antonio Cadeddu, The truths of science&nbsp;– Convenient, story, story: Pastor cases ed. Leo S. Olschki, 2003, p 154</ref>
In 1907, Galtier received a significant token of esteem from the [[Karolinska Institute]] of [[Stockholm]], who asked him to send all his work on rabies to offer his candidacy Nobel Prize of [[physiology]] and medicine for the year 1908.<ref>{{cite book|last1=Cadeddu|first1=Antonio|title=Les vérités de la science : pratique, récit, histoire ; le cas Pasteur|date=2005|publisher=Olschki|location=Firenze|isbn=9788822254641|page=154|language=fr}}</ref> However, Galtier was never nominated for a Nobel Prize;<ref name="Bazin 2011">{{cite book|last1=Bazin|first1=Hervé|title=Vaccination : a history from Lady Montagu to genetic engineering|date=2011|publisher=J. Libbey Eurotext|location=Montrouge|isbn=9782742007752|page=466}}</ref> as his death most likely interrupted the nomination process.<ref name="Bazin 2011"/>

=== 1908 ===
{{Citation needed span | He died in 1908, and so never knew that he would have been awarded the [[Nobel Prize in Physiology and Medicine]] for his work on rabies. (the prize is never awarded posthumously)|date=May 2015}}.


=== Other work ===
=== Other work ===
He also wrote several works on the intimate nature of the tissues on the infectiousness of the virus.
Galtier also wrote several works on the intimate nature of the tissues on the infectiousness of the virus.


He wrote two books on "health regulation and legislation of its relationship with the pet trade" and on "The Treaty of contagious diseases and animal health."
He wrote two books on ''Health regulation and legislation of its relationship with the pet trade'' and on ''The Treaty of contagious diseases and animal health.''


Pierre Galtier has focused mainly on infectious diseases of domestic animals: rabies, [[common cold]], [[tuberculosis]], [[coal (disease)|coal]], pneumococcal enteritis, etc.<ref>Jean Théodoridès, History of rabies&nbsp;– Canem cellar, ed. Masson, 1986, p 190.</ref>
Galtier focused mainly on infectious diseases of domestic animals: rabies, the [[common cold]], [[tuberculosis]], [[anthrax]], and [[pneumococcal enteritis]].{{sfn|Théodoridès|1986|p=190}}


== Publications ==
In addition to its findings on rabies, it also carries the [[common cold]].


=== Publications about rabies ===
== Works ==


* {{cite journal|last1=Galtier|first1=Pierre|title=Études sur la rage|journal=Rec. Méd. Vét|date=1879|volume=6, 2nd series|issue=17|pages=857–867|trans-title=Studies on rabies|language=fr}}
=== Rabies ===
* {{cite journal|last1=Galtier|first1=P.|title=Études sur la rage|journal=Ann. Med. Vet.|date=1879|volume=28|pages=627–39|trans-title=Studies on rabies|language=fr}}

* Pierre Galtier, studies on rabies Rec. Med. Vet, 1879, 6, 2 E set number 17 p.&nbsp;857–867.
* Pierre Galtier, studies on rabies&nbsp;– Rage of the rabbit. Galtier memory presented to the Academy of Sciences by M. Bouley, Proceedings of the Academy of Sciences in 1879, volume 89, pages 444–446, 25 August 1879.
* Pierre Galtier, First demonstration of rabies immunity and toxicity of nervous matter. Mr. Galtier submission to the Academy of Medicine by Mr. Bouley, Bulletin of the Academy of Medicine 1881, Volume 10, p 90–94, 25 January 1881
* Pierre Galtier, Studies on rabies, Ann. Med. Vet., 1879, 28, p.&nbsp;627–639.
* Pierre Galtier, studies on rabies&nbsp;– Rage of the rabbit. Galtier memory presented to the Academy of Sciences by M. Bouley, Proceedings of the Academy of Sciences in 1879, volume 89, pages 444–446, August 25, 1879.
* Pierre Galtier, First demonstration of rabies immunity and toxicity of nervous matter. Mr. Galtier submission to the Academy of Medicine by Mr. Bouley, Bulletin of the Academy of Medicine 1881, Volume 10, p 90-94, January 25, 1881
* Pierre Galtier, Transmission of rabies virus, Bull Acad. Med., 1881 {2} {e} series, Volume 10, p.&nbsp;90–94
* Pierre Galtier, Transmission of rabies virus, Bull Acad. Med., 1881 {2} {e} series, Volume 10, p.&nbsp;90–94
* {{cite journal|last1=Galtier|first1=Pierre V.|title=Les injections de virus rabique dans le torrent circulatoire ne provoquent pas l'éclosion de la rage et semblent conférer l'immunité. La rage peut être transmise par l'ingestion de la matiere rabique|journal=Proceedings of the Academy of Sciences|date=1 August 1881|volume=93|pages=284–285|trans-title=Rabies injections into the circulation do not cause the outbreak of rabies and appear to confer immunity. Rabies can be transmitted by ingestion of the rabies matter|location=Paris|language=fr}}
* Pierre Galtier, rabies injections into the circulation do not cause the outbreak of rabies and appear to confer immunity. Rabies can be transmitted by ingestion of the rabies matter. Note Mr. Galtier, presented at the Academy of Sciences by M.Bouley, Proceedings of the Academy of Sciences in 1881, Volume 93, p.&nbsp;284–285, August 1, 1881
* Pierre Galtier, The proposed rabies in animals and humans in view of its characters and its prophylaxis, ed. Printing L.Bourgeon (Barbier Prize Academy of Medicine. Session of December 13, 1887). (Bréant Prize of the Academy of Sciences on Professor Bouchard's proposal claiming for the teacher Galtier, the first demonstration of rabies immunity. Session of December 26, 1887)
* {{cite book|last1=Galtier|first1=V|title=La rage envisagée chez les animaux et chez l'homme au point de vue de ses caractères et de sa prophylaxie|date=1886|publisher=L.Bourgeon|location=Lyon, France|url=http://gallica.bnf.fr/ark:/12148/bpt6k5461650w|language=fr}} (Barbier Prize Academy of Medicine. Session of 13 December 1887). (Bréant Prize of the Academy of Sciences on Professor Bouchard's proposal claiming for the teacher Galtier, the first demonstration of rabies immunity. Session of 26 December 1887)
* Pierre Galtier, Persistence of rabid virulence in buried corpses. Note Mr. Galtier presented to the Academy of Sciences by Mr. Chauveau. Proceedings of the Academy of Sciences 1888, vol 106, p.&nbsp;364–366, January 30, 1888
* Pierre Galtier, Persistence of rabid virulence in buried corpses. Note Mr. Galtier presented to the Academy of Sciences by Mr. Chauveau. Proceedings of the Academy of Sciences 1888, vol 106, p.&nbsp;364–366, 30 January 1888
* Pierre Galtier, New experiences on anti-rabies inoculation to preserve herbivorous animals from rabies after mad dogs bite. A shelf life of the rabies virus. Note Mr. Galtier, presented at the Academy of Sciences by M. Chauveau. Proceedings of the Academy of Sciences in 1888, volume 106, pages 1189–1191, April 16, 1888.
* Pierre Galtier, New experiences on anti-rabies inoculation to preserve herbivorous animals from rabies after mad dogs bite. A shelf life of the rabies virus. Note Mr. Galtier, presented at the Academy of Sciences by M. Chauveau. Proceedings of the Academy of Sciences in 1888, volume 106, pages 1189–1191, 16 April 1888.
* Pierre Galtier, New experiments designed to demonstrate the efficacy of intravenous injections of rabies virus to preserve rabies animals bitten by rabid dogs. Note Mr. Galtier presented to the Academy of Sciences by Mr. Chauveau, Proceedings of the Academy of Sciences in 1888, volume 107, pages 798–799, November 12, 1888
* Pierre Galtier, New experiments designed to demonstrate the efficacy of intravenous injections of rabies virus to preserve rabies animals bitten by rabid dogs. Note Mr. Galtier presented to the Academy of Sciences by Mr. Chauveau, Proceedings of the Academy of Sciences in 1888, volume 107, pages 798–799, 12 November 1888
* Pierre Galtier, Treaty of infectious diseases, 1891, vol. 2, 141. (a chapter is dedicated to rabies).
* Pierre Galtier, Treaty of infectious diseases, 1891, vol. 2, 141. (a chapter is dedicated to rabies).
* Pierre Galtier, A History page. Discovery of rabies immunity. Rabies vaccination by intravenous injection. Note communicated to the Barcelona Pasteur Review (-Spain Veterinary Journal in May 1908). Journal of Veterinary Medicine and Zoology, May 1904, 55, p.&nbsp;274–277
* Pierre Galtier, A History page. Discovery of rabies immunity. Rabies vaccination by intravenous injection. Note communicated to the Barcelona Pasteur Review (-Spain Veterinary Journal in May 1908). Journal of Veterinary Medicine and Zoology, May 1904, 55, p.&nbsp;274–277


=== On the other works as rabies ===
=== Others ===
{{ubl|{{cite book |first=Pierre |last=Galtier |author-mask=1 |title=Traité des maladies contagieuses et de la police sanitaire des animaux domestiques |language=fr |place=Lyon |publisher=Beau |date=1880}}
* Pierre Galtier, Treaty of contagious diseases and animal health of pets, ed. Beautiful Printing, Lyon, 1880. Introduced in October 1880 to the Academy of Medicine by Mr. Bouley
| {{cite journal |first=Pierre |last=Galtier |author-mask=1 |title=Dangers de l'utilisation des produits tels que le petit lait et le fromage, obtenus avec le lait de vaches tuberculeuses |language=fr |journal=[[Comptes rendus de l'Académie des sciences]] |date=9 May 1887 |volume=104 |pages=1333–1335}}
* Pierre Galtier, hazards in the use of products such as whey cheese, obtained from the milk of tuberculous cows (Presented at the Academy of Sciences by Mr. Chauveau), Proceedings of the Academy of Sciences 1887, Volume 104, pages 1333–1335, May 9, 1887
* Pierre Galtier, From the use of fresh blood in the clarification of wines, from the standpoint of possible transmission of tuberculosis to man (Presented at the Academy of Sciences by Mr. Chauveau), Proceedings of the Academy of Sciences in 1887, volume 104, pages 1879 to 1881, June 27, 1887
| {{cite journal |first=Pierre |last=Galtier |author-mask=1 |title=De l'emploi des sangs frais dans la clarification des vins, au point de vue de la transmission possible de la tuberculose à l'homme |language=fr |journal=[[Comptes rendus de l'Académie des sciences]] |volume=104 |pages=1879–1881 |date=27 June 1887}}
| {{cite journal |first=Pierre |last=Galtier |author-mask=1 |title=Dangers des matières tuberculeuses qui ont subi le chauffage, la dessiccation, le contact de l'eau, la salaison, la congélation, la putréfaction |language=fr |journal=[[Comptes rendus de l'Académie des sciences]] |volume=105 |pages=231–234 |date=25 July 1887}}
* Pierre Galtier, hazards tuberculous materials that have undergone heating,&nbsp;– drying, the contact with water, salting, freezing, putrefaction (Presented at the Academy of Sciences by Mr. Chauveau), Proceedings of the Academy of Sciences in 1887, volume 105, pages 231–234, July 25, 1887
* Pierre Galtier and Violet, Infectious Pneumo-enteritis or forage varieties of typhoid affections solipeds animals 1890. Memory crowned by the National Society of Agriculture of France Olivier de Serres Price. Barbier prices Medical Academy Session on December 15, 1891)
| {{cite book |first1=Pierre |last1=Galtier |author-mask=1 |last2=Violet |title=Les pneumo-entérites infectieuses des fourrages ou variétés des affections typhoïdes des animaux solipèdes |language=fr |date=1890 |place=Lyon}} ''[[Mémoire]]'' awarded with the Olivier de Serres Prize by the National Society of Agriculture of France and with the Barbier Prize by the Academy of Medicine on 15 December 1891.
* Pierre Galtier, Treaty of contagious diseases (2 E Revised Edition), ed. Hasselin and Houzeau. The first volume, pages 935 and second volume, 975 pages. 1891–1892 (Stanski Prize Academy of Medicine. Session of December 13, 1892)
| {{cite book |first=Pierre |last=Galtier |author-mask=1 |title=Traité des maladies contagieuses |language=fr |edition=2nd revised |publisher=Hasselin et Houzeau |date=1891–1892}} Volume I: 935 pages, volume II: 975 pages. Awarded with the [[Gaétan-Pierre Stanski|Stanski Prize]] by the Academy of Medicine on 13 December 1892.
| {{cite book |first=Pierre |last=Galtier |author-mask=1 |title=Traité des maladies contagieuses |language=fr |place=Paris |date=1897 |publisher=Asselin-Houzeau}}
* Pierre Galtier, Treaty of contagious diseases, ed Asselin-Houzeau, Paris, 1897
* Pierre Galtier, iodine action on the virus of anthrax and blackleg on the virus. Possibility to transform both virus vaccine by adding Lugol's solution at the time of inoculation, Journal of Veterinary Medicine and Animal Science, August 1903, p.&nbsp;462–467.
| {{cite journal |first=Pierre |last=Galtier |author-mask=1 |title=Action de l'iode sur le virus du charbon bactéridien et sur le virus du charbon symptomatique |language=fr |journal=Journal de médecine vétérinaire et de zootechnie |date=August 1903 |pages=462–467}}
}}


== Quotes ==
==Notes==
{{notelist}}

* '' "It is not enough that his name be saved from oblivion, the future must associate it with the Pastor of glory '' (Professor Pierre Lépine)
* '' "I am particularly grateful to Jean Théodoridès have devoted an entire chapter in the work of Gaultier. This great unknown precursor of Pasteur (who cites incidentally) not only demonstrated the first opportunity to make ruminants refractory to rabies, but it has, by introducing the passages in rabbits in the experimental technique (that Pasteur will adopt after the failure of the passages on the monkey) gave the experimenter practical way to work safely to observe the behavior and evolution of rabies strains. We often forget that it is Galtier which through its work open to Pasteur beautiful path which led to one of the greatest triumphs of medical science '' (Professor Pierre Lépine)<ref>Quote Pierre Lépine in Jean Théodoridès, History of rage Canem cellar, ed. Masson, 1986, preface by Pierre Lépine.</ref>
* '' "It's Galtier which unquestionably opens the way for the modern systematic and reasoned experimentation in rage" '' (Professor Pierre Lépine)<ref>Quote Jean Pierre Lepine in Théodoridès, History of rabies: Canem cellar, ed. Masson, 1986, p 189.</ref>
* '' "These two discoveries Galtier<ref>That is to say, the use of the rabbit as experimental animal for the study of rabies and the ability to immunize against the disease with the help of 'intravenous inoculations of rabies virus well tolerated by the sheep and goat</ref> and rabies were a disease whose experimentation was within the reach of every laboratory, they were so precarious, and whose preventive healing could be expected.


== References ==
== References ==
{{reflist}}
{{reflist}}

===Works cited===
{{refbegin}}
*{{cite book |title=Histoire de la rage: cave canem |trans-title=History of rabies: seize the dog|first=Jean |last=Théodoridès |place=Paris |publisher=Masson |year=1986 |language=fr }}
{{refend}}


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[[Category:French veterinarians]]
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[[Category:Chevaliers of the Légion d'honneur]]
[[Category:Knights of the Legion of Honour]]

Latest revision as of 21:46, 18 January 2024

Pierre-Victor Galtier
Bust of Pierre-Victor Galtier
Born(1846-10-15)15 October 1846
Langogne, Lozère
Died24 April 1908(1908-04-24) (aged 61)
NationalityFrench
OccupationVeterinarian
Known forResearch into the rabies virus

Pierre-Victor or Pierre Victor Galtier ((1846-10-15)15 October 1846 – (1908-04-24)24 April 1908) was a veterinarian and professor at the National Veterinary School of Lyon [fr], specialising in pathology of infectious diseases, health surveillance and commercial and medical legislation. He developed a rabies vaccine which had some experimental success in laboratory animals.

Early life and studies[edit]

Galtier was born on 15 October 1846 in Langogne, Lozère to a farmer's family.[1] In 1853, he was entrusted to the nuns who ran the local school. He escaped from this school twice, only to be placed with his grandmother who lived in Langogne. There, he attended secondary school, leaving after the tenth grade.

He read Greco-Roman studies at La Chapelle-Saint-Mesmin in the "Petit Séminaire", the famous ecclesiastical secondary school of Bishop Felix Dupanloup, an outpost of the Seminar d'Orléans. He received his bachelor's degree with honours.

He studied for his master's degree and his veterinary license at Marvejols college. Around this time Lozère created a scholarship to help poor students to study to become veterinarians, which Galtier received and used to study at the National Veterinary School of Lyon [fr]. He came top of the class for four consecutive years, and graduated in 1873 as a valedictorian, receiving the "Grand prix Bourgelat".

Career[edit]

Galtier began his professional career as an associate of Monsieur Delorme, a veterinarian in Arles, whose daughter he married. He began teaching veterinary pathology and eventually became the Chair of Infectious Diseases. Aged 33, he began his work on rabies.

In 1876, he was appointed the Chair of Pathology and Internal Medicine in the veterinary science department at Lyon. In 1877, his department began to carry out studies on microbial pathology and microbiology. This led to the school supporting the idea of contagious diseases such as tuberculosis, the common cold, and rabies, as opposed to the National Veterinary School of Alfort which supported the idea of spontaneous generation.

In 1878 he was appointed professor of pathology of infectious diseases, animal health, trade and medical law. In the same year, Mr. Bouley, Inspector General of veterinary schools, created a new department that would separate the teaching of general pathology from that of communicable diseases. Pierre Victor Galtier was appointed to the department chair and held the position for 30 years.

In 1879, he made important discoveries about two deadly diseases: common cold and rabies. In 1883, he obtained a law degree.

For his work on rabies, Galtier was considered for the 1908 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine. However, he died in La Mulatière on 24 April 1908, thereby preventing his nomination.[2][3]

Honors[edit]

  • 1881: Member of the Anthropological Society of Lyon
  • 1887: Member of the National Agricultural Society, natural history and useful Arts de Lyon
  • 1888: Officer Academy
  • 1891: Knight Legion of Honor
  • 1895: Officer of the Order of Agricultural Merit
  • Correspondent of the Academy of Medicine
  • 1898: Correspondent of the National Society of Agriculture
  • 1898: Associate of the National Central Society of Veterinary Medicine Associate
  • 1901: Elected Associate of the Académie nationale de médecine, by 56 votes out of 59
  • 1903: Appointed Commander of Agricultural Merit
  • 1903–08: Member of the Veterinary Academy of France
  • 1903: Member of the Rhône Hygiene County Council
  • 1906: Appointed Officer of Education
    • Member of the Rhone vaccines commission
    • Four gold medals with the effigy of Olivier de Serres (works on rabies, pneumo-enteritis in sheep and horse and tuberculosis) Agricultural Society of France
  • 1887: Bréant Prize (for his work on rabies)[4]
  • 1887: Barbier Prize French: Prix Barbier (for his work on rabies). Academy of Medicine, contests
  • 1890: Behague Prize of the National Society of Agriculture of France for his work on the pneumo-enteritis in sheep (25 June)
  • 1891: Barbier Prize (for his work on pneumo-enteritis from cheeses)
  • 1892: Stanski Prize (for the second edition of contagious diseases)

Work on rabies[edit]

Pierre Galtier was notable for his work on rabies; he was the first to develop a vaccine for rabies. He also made important advances in the study of the common cold and on the infectiousness of viruses.

Galtier assumed that, because of the incubation period of rabies, the development of a vaccine could be used as curative for a disease like this.[5]

1879[edit]

His first publication on rabies was a thesis entitled "Studies on rabies" published in two veterinary journals[6][7][8] and whose findings are published in the Proceedings of the Academy of Sciences.

On 25 April 1879, the Academy of Sciences published his notes on rabies.[9]

The article made clear his conclusions about rabies:

  1. The dog rabies is transmitted to the rabbit, which thus becomes a convenient and safe reagent to determine the status of non-virulence or virulence of various liquids from rabid animals (…)
  2. Rabies is transmitted to animals (rabbits) of his kind (…)
  3. Symptoms that predominate in the rabid rabbits are paralysis and convulsions.
  4. The rabbit can live from several hours to one, two and even four days after the disease has clearly declared.
  5. (…) the incubation period[a] is shorter in him than in other species. (Based on an experience table published in the note, Galtier accurately and correctly calculates an average incubation time for the rabbit 18 days).
  6. Salicylic acid, administered by hypodermic injection, the daily dose of 0.0068 gr for fourteen consecutive days from the fiftieth hour after inoculation, did not prevent the development of rabies the rabbit.
  7. The saliva of rabid dog, collected on the living animal and stored in the water is still virulent five, fourteen twenty-four hours.

Galtier also had a brilliant idea: he began experiments to find an agent capable of neutralizing rabies virus. He thought that the discovery of an effective preventive was almost equivalent to the discovery of a cure, especially if it was effective when administered within a day or two of an infected bite.[5] It is this 'genius idea which is the basis of preventive treatment for rabies by vaccination'.

1880[edit]

In 1880, Galtier published a "Treaty of contagious diseases" which contains a chapter on rabies.[b]

In this book, he wrote this sentence summarizing his first observations on immunity to rabies: "Rabies virus injected directly into the blood stream is ineffective, at least this is what I found in several experiences where I had injected into the jugular vein of the sheep a large amount of rabid drool".[10] His experiments were published in several articles the following year.

Also in 1880, Louis Pasteur became interested in rabies and took note of Galtier's work, regarding him with a certain disdain, stating that these experiments "do not make it possible to reconicle, let alone identify the disease […] as rabies". Pasteur often denigrated his predecessors before taking over their work, and the credit for it; he also did this with Henri Toussaint and Antoine Béchamp.

1881[edit]

In August 1881, Galtier sent a note to the Academy of Sciences.[11] He noted his experiences of the intravenous inoculation of the rabies virus in the bloodstream.

He wrote:

The findings that emerge from these facts are the following:

  1. Injections of rabies virus into the veins of the sheep do not cause rabies and seem to confer immunity.
  2. Rabies can be transmitted by injection of the rabies material.

This method provided immunity against rabies in sheep. In the Bulletin of the Academy of Medicine, he wrote: "I injected the rabies saliva into the jugular vein of sheep seven times, and never saw rabies, one of my test subjects was successively inoculated with saliva from a rabid dog, four months after this inoculation, the animal is alive and well; he seems to have acquired immunity. I inoculated him for another fortnight by putting eight cubic centimeters of rabid saliva in the peritoneum; it always went very well; then I would administer him another inoculation."[12]

According to the science historian Jean Théodoridès, this is the first time in the history of medicine that the idea of immunization against rabies was supported by convincing experimental results.[13]

1882[edit]

Galtier remarked "intravenous inoculation is ineffective. [But] immunity follows this inoculation in sheep", and he noted the absence of virus in the nerve centers.

This last point drew the attention of Louis Pasteur who saw a lack of sensitivity due to the subcutaneous inoculation technique. With his student Émile Roux, Pasteur developed an intracranial inoculation, by trepanning the skull of a dog. This isolated the virus in the nerve centers, and supported the idea that rabies is neurotropic, meaning that the virus preferentially develops in nerve cells, and spreads through nerve pathways from the peripheral inoculation point to the brain.

1883[edit]

In 1883, Émile Roux published his medical doctorate thesis on "New acquisitions on rabies." According to Jean Théodoridès,[14] the most striking thing about Roux's thesis is the frequent mention of the work of Galtier, whereas Pasteur referred to Galtier only incidentally.[15]

1886[edit]

In 1886, Galtier published an important book on rabies, Rabies considered in animals and humans from the point of view of its character and its prophylaxis (French: La rage envisagée chez les animaux et chez l'homme au point de vue de ses caractères et de sa prophylaxie). It discussed:[13]

  • Symptoms
  • Curability
  • Cause, proving the lack of "spontaneous" rabies, and concluding that "contagion is the only cause that can cause rabies in animals of any kind."
  • Transmission of rabies between different animals
  • Experimental methods of transmission of rabies by bites

It reviewed Galtier's research of 1879–1881, and reported that research was continuing as of 1886 (the date of publication of the book).[13]

The book also dealt with health measures and forensics, dog control measures (wearing the collar, a muzzle, leash).[13]

1887[edit]

In 1887, Galtier received the Barbier Prize (French: Prix Barbier) from the Académie nationale de médecine for his work on rabies.

In its report on awarding the Barbier Prize to Galtier, Edmond Nocard wrote: "The discovery of Mr. Galtier, therefore, has a high importance not only from the scientific point of view but also in practical point of view; it is hoped that it will soon lead to the establishment of a simple, practical and effective treatment, saving the largest number of bitten animals."[16]

The same year, he received the Bréant Price of the Academy of Sciences (December 1887) for his book on rabies. Bouchard, on behalf of the Commission consisting of Marey, Charcot, Brown- Séquard and Verneuil emphasized the importance of the work of several years preceding those of Louis Pasteur.[17]

1888[edit]

On 30 January 1888, Galtier published an article in the Proceedings of the Academy of Sciences.[18] He insisted that "the rabies virus retains its activity in buried corpses, so that when doubts arise afterwards about the nature of the disease that caused the death, exhumation, and inoculation of the bulb are naturally indicated".[19]

For Galtier (a veterinary professor, qualified in medical law and contagious diseases), the consequence of the persistence of the rabies virus meant that, in cases of question of the liability of animal owners, corpses could be exhumed to confirm a diagnosis of rabies.[20]

On 16 April 1888, he again sent a note.[21] He recalled his experiences in 1880–1881 showing that injection of the rabies virus in the veins of sheep and goats did not cause rabies, but instead conferred immunity.[22] He noted that research in 1884 by Edmond Nocard and Emile Roux confirmed the validity of these deductions.[23] These authors noted that intravenous injection can prevent rabies after inoculation into the eye, and after the bite of a rabid animal.[13]

In his article, Galtier also related his experiments on sheep.

1891[edit]

The second edition of Galtier's On Contagious Diseases was published in 1891. Galtier was disappointed, to the point of physical pain,[24] by the negative remarks from Louis Pasteur about his research. Pateur stated that dogs did not acquire immunity, as Galtier found in sheep and goats, following intravenous injection of rabies.[17] However, Edmond Nocard and Emile Roux had already confirmed in 1888 that their experiments of 1884 had confirmed Galtier's experiments of 1881.[13]

1904[edit]

In 1904, Galtier lost four of his eight children and his wife, and was strongly discouraged.[5]

He published an article entitled "Pages of history"[25] in which he wrote: "… I had studied first, from 1879-80-81, the effects of intravenous injection of the rabies virus. I was the first to demonstrate, in the most peremptory manner, its safety in herbivorous animals, and immunizing action. I established this first, before there was any thought of vaccination Pasteur or any others, that immunity against deadly rabies could be granted to certain animals by a particular method of inoculation … From 1881 onward, I had shown that virus injected into the veins of sheep and goats does not cause rabies, but confers immunity".

In this article, he promoted is pioneering rabies immunizations, stressing that the results achieved in small ruminants (sheep and goats) were confirmed by Edmond Nocard and Emile Roux in 1888.[26][27]

1907[edit]

In 1907, Galtier received a significant token of esteem from the Karolinska Institute of Stockholm, who asked him to send all his work on rabies to offer his candidacy Nobel Prize of physiology and medicine for the year 1908.[28] However, Galtier was never nominated for a Nobel Prize;[29] as his death most likely interrupted the nomination process.[29]

Other work[edit]

Galtier also wrote several works on the intimate nature of the tissues on the infectiousness of the virus.

He wrote two books on Health regulation and legislation of its relationship with the pet trade and on The Treaty of contagious diseases and animal health.

Galtier focused mainly on infectious diseases of domestic animals: rabies, the common cold, tuberculosis, anthrax, and pneumococcal enteritis.[8]

Publications[edit]

Publications about rabies[edit]

  • Galtier, Pierre (1879). "Études sur la rage" [Studies on rabies]. Rec. Méd. Vét (in French). 6, 2nd series (17): 857–867.
  • Galtier, P. (1879). "Études sur la rage" [Studies on rabies]. Ann. Med. Vet. (in French). 28: 627–39.
  • Pierre Galtier, studies on rabies – Rage of the rabbit. Galtier memory presented to the Academy of Sciences by M. Bouley, Proceedings of the Academy of Sciences in 1879, volume 89, pages 444–446, 25 August 1879.
  • Pierre Galtier, First demonstration of rabies immunity and toxicity of nervous matter. Mr. Galtier submission to the Academy of Medicine by Mr. Bouley, Bulletin of the Academy of Medicine 1881, Volume 10, p 90–94, 25 January 1881
  • Pierre Galtier, Transmission of rabies virus, Bull Acad. Med., 1881 {2} {e} series, Volume 10, p. 90–94
  • Galtier, Pierre V. (1 August 1881). "Les injections de virus rabique dans le torrent circulatoire ne provoquent pas l'éclosion de la rage et semblent conférer l'immunité. La rage peut être transmise par l'ingestion de la matiere rabique" [Rabies injections into the circulation do not cause the outbreak of rabies and appear to confer immunity. Rabies can be transmitted by ingestion of the rabies matter]. Proceedings of the Academy of Sciences (in French). 93. Paris: 284–285.
  • Galtier, V (1886). La rage envisagée chez les animaux et chez l'homme au point de vue de ses caractères et de sa prophylaxie (in French). Lyon, France: L.Bourgeon. (Barbier Prize Academy of Medicine. Session of 13 December 1887). (Bréant Prize of the Academy of Sciences on Professor Bouchard's proposal claiming for the teacher Galtier, the first demonstration of rabies immunity. Session of 26 December 1887)
  • Pierre Galtier, Persistence of rabid virulence in buried corpses. Note Mr. Galtier presented to the Academy of Sciences by Mr. Chauveau. Proceedings of the Academy of Sciences 1888, vol 106, p. 364–366, 30 January 1888
  • Pierre Galtier, New experiences on anti-rabies inoculation to preserve herbivorous animals from rabies after mad dogs bite. A shelf life of the rabies virus. Note Mr. Galtier, presented at the Academy of Sciences by M. Chauveau. Proceedings of the Academy of Sciences in 1888, volume 106, pages 1189–1191, 16 April 1888.
  • Pierre Galtier, New experiments designed to demonstrate the efficacy of intravenous injections of rabies virus to preserve rabies animals bitten by rabid dogs. Note Mr. Galtier presented to the Academy of Sciences by Mr. Chauveau, Proceedings of the Academy of Sciences in 1888, volume 107, pages 798–799, 12 November 1888
  • Pierre Galtier, Treaty of infectious diseases, 1891, vol. 2, 141. (a chapter is dedicated to rabies).
  • Pierre Galtier, A History page. Discovery of rabies immunity. Rabies vaccination by intravenous injection. Note communicated to the Barcelona Pasteur Review (-Spain Veterinary Journal in May 1908). Journal of Veterinary Medicine and Zoology, May 1904, 55, p. 274–277

Others[edit]

  • — (1880). Traité des maladies contagieuses et de la police sanitaire des animaux domestiques (in French). Lyon: Beau.
  • — (9 May 1887). "Dangers de l'utilisation des produits tels que le petit lait et le fromage, obtenus avec le lait de vaches tuberculeuses". Comptes rendus de l'Académie des sciences (in French). 104: 1333–1335.
  • — (27 June 1887). "De l'emploi des sangs frais dans la clarification des vins, au point de vue de la transmission possible de la tuberculose à l'homme". Comptes rendus de l'Académie des sciences (in French). 104: 1879–1881.
  • — (25 July 1887). "Dangers des matières tuberculeuses qui ont subi le chauffage, la dessiccation, le contact de l'eau, la salaison, la congélation, la putréfaction". Comptes rendus de l'Académie des sciences (in French). 105: 231–234.
  • —; Violet (1890). Les pneumo-entérites infectieuses des fourrages ou variétés des affections typhoïdes des animaux solipèdes (in French). Lyon.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link) Mémoire awarded with the Olivier de Serres Prize by the National Society of Agriculture of France and with the Barbier Prize by the Academy of Medicine on 15 December 1891.
  • — (1891–1892). Traité des maladies contagieuses (in French) (2nd revised ed.). Hasselin et Houzeau. Volume I: 935 pages, volume II: 975 pages. Awarded with the Stanski Prize by the Academy of Medicine on 13 December 1892.
  • — (1897). Traité des maladies contagieuses (in French). Paris: Asselin-Houzeau.
  • — (August 1903). "Action de l'iode sur le virus du charbon bactéridien et sur le virus du charbon symptomatique". Journal de médecine vétérinaire et de zootechnie (in French): 462–467.

Notes[edit]

  1. ^ That is to say, the incubation period for rabies.
  2. ^ This book had three editions: in 1880, 1891, 1897.

References[edit]

  1. ^ Théodoridès 1986, p. 189.
  2. ^ Théodoridès 1986, VI: Les recherches de Galtier (1879–1904).
  3. ^ Bazin, Hervé (2008). "Un survol de quelques protagonistes de cette histoire". L'Histoire des Vaccinations [Vaccination, a History] (in French). Montrouge: John Libbey. pp. 400–401.
  4. ^ Proceedings of the Academy of Sciences, 1887, Vol 105, session of 26 December 1887
  5. ^ a b c "Life Galtier" (in French). Archived from the original on 30 May 2009.
  6. ^ Pierre Galtier, studies on rabies Rec. Med. Vet, 1879, 6, {2} {E} series, No. 17, pp 857–867.
  7. ^ Pierre Galtier, Studies on rabies, Ann. Med. Vet., 1879 28, p. 627-639.
  8. ^ a b Théodoridès 1986, p. 190.
  9. ^ Pierre Galtier, studies on rabies (Presented by Mr. Bouley), Proceedings of the Academy of Sciences 1879, Volume 89, 25 August 1879, p. 444-446.
  10. ^ Théodoridès 1986, p. 191.
  11. ^ Pierre Galtier, rabies injections into the circulation do not cause the outbreak of rabies and appear to confer immunity. Rabies can be transmitted by ingestion of the rabies material (Presented by Mr. Bouley), Proceedings of the Academy of Sciences, 1881, Volume 93, 1 August 1881, pp 284–285.
  12. ^ Pierre Galtier, Transmission of rabies virus, Bull Acad. Med, 1881 {2} {e} series, Volume 10, pp 90–94 (quote taken from Cadeddu, Antonio (2005). Les vérités de la science : pratique, récit, histoire ; le cas Pasteur (in French). Firenze: Olschki. p. 155. ISBN 9788822254641.)
  13. ^ a b c d e f Théodoridès 1986, p. 214.
  14. ^ Théodoridès 1986, pp. 212–213.
  15. ^ Théodoridès 1986, p. 213.
  16. ^ Théodoridès 1986, pp. 197–198.
  17. ^ a b Théodoridès 1986, p. 198.
  18. ^ Pierre Galtier, Persistence of rabies virulence in buried corpses (Presented by Mr. Chauveau), Proceedings Academy of Sciences, 1888, Vol 106, pp 364–366.
  19. ^ Pierre Galtier, Persistence of rabid virulence in buried corpses (Presented by Mr. Chauveau), Proceedings of the Academy of Science, 1888, vol 106, p 364.
  20. ^ Pierre Galtier, Persistence of rabid virulence in buried corpses (Presented by Mr. Chauveau), Proceedings of the Academy of Science, 1888, vol 106, p 366 .
  21. ^ Pierre Galtier, News rabies inoculation experiments to preserve herbivorous animals from rabies after rabid dog bites (Presented by Mr. Chauveau), Proceedings of the Academy of Sciences, 1888, Vol 106, pp 1189–1191.
  22. ^ Pierre Galtier, News rabies inoculation experiments to preserve herbivorous animals from rabies following bites from rabid dogs (Presented by M. Chauveau, Proceedings of the Academy of Sciences, 1888 Volume 106, pp 1189-1190
  23. ^ Nocard, Edmond; Roux, Emile (1887). "Expériences sur la vaccination des ruminants contre la rage par injections intraveineuses de virus rabique" [Experiments on the vaccination of ruminants against rabies by intravenous injections of the rabies virus]. Annales de l'Institut Pasteur (in French). 1: 341–353. ISSN 0020-2444.
  24. ^ Pierre Galtier, Treaty of infectious diseases, 1891, vol. 2, 141.
  25. ^ Pierre Galtier, A page of history. Discovery of rabies immunity. Rabies vaccination by intravenous, J. Med. Vet. Zool (Lyon), 1904, 55, pp 274–277
  26. ^ Nocard, Edmond; Roux, Emile (1888). "Expériences sur la vaccination des ruminants contre la rage par injections intraveineuses de virus rabique" [Experiments on the vaccination of ruminants against rabies by intravenous injections of the rabies virus]. Annales de l'Institut Pasteur (in French). 2: 341–353. ISSN 0020-2444.
  27. ^ Théodoridès 1986, p. 197.
  28. ^ Cadeddu, Antonio (2005). Les vérités de la science : pratique, récit, histoire ; le cas Pasteur (in French). Firenze: Olschki. p. 154. ISBN 9788822254641.
  29. ^ a b Bazin, Hervé (2011). Vaccination : a history from Lady Montagu to genetic engineering. Montrouge: J. Libbey Eurotext. p. 466. ISBN 9782742007752.

Works cited[edit]

  • Théodoridès, Jean (1986). Histoire de la rage: cave canem [History of rabies: seize the dog] (in French). Paris: Masson.