Literature DB >> 20183203

Cerebral localization in antiquity.

F Clifford Rose1.   

Abstract

Fragments of neurology can be found in the oldest medical writings in antiquity. Recognizable cerebral localization is seen in Egyptian medical papyri. Most notably, the Edwin Smith papyrus describes hemiplegia after a head injury. Similar echoes can be seen in Homer, the Bible, and the pre-Hippocratic writer Alcmaeon of Croton. While Biblical writers thought that the heart was the seat of the soul, Hippocratic writers located it in the head. Alexandrian anatomists described the nerves, and Galen developed the ventricular theory of cognition whereby mental functions are classified and localized in one of the cerebral ventricles. Medieval scholars, including the early Church Fathers, modified Galenic ventricular theory so as to make it a dynamic model of cognition. Physicians in antiquity subdivided the brain into separate areas and attributed to them different functions, a phenomenon that connects them with modern neurologists.

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Year:  2009        PMID: 20183203     DOI: 10.1080/09647040802025052

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Hist Neurosci        ISSN: 0964-704X            Impact factor:   0.529


  2 in total

1.  Cerebral localization of the mind and higher functions The beginnings.

Authors:  Eliasz Engelhardt
Journal:  Dement Neuropsychol       Date:  2018 Jul-Sep

Review 2.  The anatomy of the brain - learned over the centuries.

Authors:  Luiz Severo Bem Junior; Nilson Batista Lemos; Luís Felipe Gonçalves de Lima; Artêmio José Araruna Dias; Otávio da Cunha Ferreira Neto; Carlos Cezar Sousa de Lira; Andrey Maia Silva Diniz; Nicollas Nunes Rabelo; Luciana Karla Viana Barroso; Marcelo Moraes Valença; Hildo Rocha Cirne de Azevedo Filho
Journal:  Surg Neurol Int       Date:  2021-06-28
  2 in total

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