Antoine Penchenier, orPenchinier, (? ,Montélimar,Dauphiné – 1761,Donzère), was an 18th-century French physician.
Born in Montélimar, he studied medicine inMontpellier where he held a practise. Penchenier wrote the articleGoutte (gout) for volume VII of theEncyclopédie byDiderot andD'Alembert, in which he denounced in the same time charlatans and their powders oforvietan.
After his death, his widow, Delphine Rapin, married Vincent-Amable de Roqueplane, baron de Lestrade, from Montélimar.[1][2]