Literature DB >> 22472532

Brain disease leading to mental illness: a concept initiated by the discovery of general paralysis of the insane.

J M S Pearce1.   

Abstract

In the early 19th century the prevailing alienist (psychiatrists') view was that organic lesions did not cause madness. The history of general paralysis of the insane (GPI) rests on four early publications which changed this concept: Haslam's Observations on insanity, Bayle's Recherches sur l'arachnitis chronique, Calmeil's De la paralysie considérée chez les aliénés, and Esmarch and Jessen's Syphilis und Geistesstörung. Haslam's account is unconvincing, but Bayle's report linking mental alienation with organic brain disease was a polemic that opposed established teachings. Calmeil and Delaye emphasised clinicopathological correlation and stressed the importance of white matter disease in causing dementia. GPI was to prove a crucial starting point in which the causes of mental illness were slowly transformed from psychogenic disturbances of mind and spirits to organically determined diseases.
Copyright © 2012 S. Karger AG, Basel.

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Year:  2012        PMID: 22472532     DOI: 10.1159/000336538

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Eur Neurol        ISSN: 0014-3022            Impact factor:   1.710


  1 in total

1.  Neurosyphilis With Normal Pressure Hydrocephalus and Dementia Paralytica: Serial Clinical, Laboratory and Radiological Correlations in the 21st Century.

Authors:  Kamille Abdool; Karan Seegobin; Kanterpersad Ramcharan; Adrian Alexander; Leandra Julien-Legen; Stanley Lawrence Giddings; Samuel Aboh; Fidel Rampersad
Journal:  Neurol Int       Date:  2016-10-03
  1 in total

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