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Eugène Gley



Marcel Eugène Émile Gley (1857-1930) was a French physiologist and endocrinologist who was a professor at the Collège de France in Paris. He was a colleague to Charles Robert Richet (1850-1935), and with Richet published the Journal de physiologie et de pathologie générale.

In 1891 Gley was the first to discover the importance of the parathyroid glands, which are four (or more) small endocrine glands lying close or embedded in the posterior surface of the thyroid gland. These glands had been recently discovered as an anatomical entity in 1880, however their importance was not understood at the time. Gley realized that the cause of tetany after thyroid operations was the inadvertent destruction of the parathyroid glands. He demonstrated this by removing the parathyroid glands from laboratory animals and witnessing their deaths from tetany. Because of his discovery, parathyroid glands are sometimes referred to as Gley's glands. Gley also made pioneer contributions involving the link between iodine and the thyroid.

References

  • Parathyroid Hormone: Past and Present
 
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Eugène_Gley". A list of authors is available in Wikipedia.
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