In-4° broché, 62 pages. Ernest Péan est le fils de Jules Péan. Jules Emile Péan (1830-1898), chirurgien de l'hôpital Saint-Louis, fut l'un des chirurgiens les plus renommés de son époque, notamment en chirurgie abdomino-pelvienne. Il étonna ses confrères par sa grande dextérité et la hardiesse de ses interventions. Il réalisa la première résection gastrique, pour cancer du pylore, avec anastomose gastro-duodénale. Il fut membre de l'Académie de médecine. Cf. Heirs of Hippocrates, 2099 (2ème partie seule) :"Péan was a prominent nineteenth-century Parisian surgeon noted for performing the first surgical gastrectomy for carcinoma and the invention of a hemostat which is still being used today, although in a form greatly modified from the original model depicted in this book. The modern Péan forceps has long shanks, is serrated, and is used mainly in pelvic and abdominal surgery. In the book, Deny and Exchaquet give a short history of the development of instruments for the control of hemorrhage and recount the advantages of Péan s clamp. Various types of hemostatic forceps of the time are illustrated and the Péan forceps is pictured removing a uterine polyp, a testicular tumor, and tumors of the face, tongue, and lip." ; Rutkow, Surgery : an illustrated history, p. 423 : "His name is associated with a clamp intended to obtain hemostasis by forcipressure." ; J. de Fourmestraux, In : M. Genty, Les Biographies Médicales, T. VI, pp. 161-192 : " l'utilisation rationnelle de la pince hémostatique, instrument admirable, allait permettre les plus heureuses audaces." ; Kirkup, The evolution of surgical instruments, pp. 323-332 ; Ricci, The development of gynaecologycal surgery and instruments, p. 377 ; Waller 2366.