Jules Bernard Luys (17 August 1828 â 21 August 1897) was a French neurologist known for significant contributions to nineteenth-century neuroanatomy and neuropsychiatry. He produced influential works on the structure and function of the central nervous system and published the first photographic atlas of the human brain.
Luys was born in Paris on 17 August 1828. He earned his medical degree in 1857 and began conducting extensive research on the anatomy, pathology, and functions of the central nervous system.
In 1865, Luys published Recherches sur le système cérébro-spinal, sa structure, ses fonctions et ses maladies (âÂÂStudies on the Structure, Functions and Diseases of the Cerebro-spinal SystemâÂÂ). This treatise included a hand-drawn three-dimensional atlas of the brain and contained the first description of the structure now known as the subthalamic nucleus. Luys called this region the bandelette accessoire des olives supérieures (âÂÂaccessory band of the superior olivesâÂÂ).
He identified projections from the subthalamic nucleus to the globus pallidus and described connections between the cerebral cortex and the subthalamic region. These pathways later became central to understanding the pathophysiology of ParkinsonâÂÂs disease, in which the subthalamic nucleus is now a major target for deep brain stimulation.
In recognition of LuysâÂÂs contribution, Auguste Forel named the structure corpus Luysii (âÂÂLuysâ bodyâÂÂ), a term that is still occasionally used.
In 1873, Luys published Iconographie Photographique des Centres Nerveux, the first photographic atlas of the brain and nervous system. The atlas contained seventy albumen prints showing frontal, sagittal, and horizontal sections. Some images were enlarged using a microscope, while most depicted gross neuroanatomy.
Although photography was growing in popularity as a scientific tool, the Iconographie did not immediately lead to a proliferation of neuroanatomical photographic atlases. A later example was Edward FlatauâÂÂs 1894 atlas.
In 1881, Luys co-founded the journal L'Encéphale with his colleague and friend Benjamin Ball.
LuysâÂÂs anatomical descriptions continue to influence modern neuroscience, particularly research on the basal ganglia and ParkinsonâÂÂs disease. His photographic atlas represents an early attempt to integrate emerging imaging technologies into neuroanatomical documentation.